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Immigrant inviability promotes reproductive isolation among host‐associated populations of the gall wasp Belonocnema treatae
Authors:Linyi Zhang  Amanda Driscoe  Rebecca Izen  Calli Toussaint  Jim R Ott  Scott P Egan
Affiliation:1. Department of BioSciences, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA;2. Population and Conservation Biology Program, Department of Biology, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, USA
Abstract:Ecological speciation describes the evolutionary process whereby divergent natural selection between environments generates reproductive isolation. Studying the magnitude of sequential reproductive barriers between ecologically divergent populations improves our understanding of the way these barriers evolve and how each contributes to the speciation process. Immigrant inviability describes the lower fitness of immigrants in non‐native environments and is an important, but long underexplored, reproductive barrier. In this study, we test the role of immigrant inviability among host‐associated populations of the gall wasp Belonocnema treataeMayr (Hymenoptera: Cynipini: Cynipidae) by measuring the ability of gall wasps to initiate and complete gall formation, while avoiding host immune responses, on closely related native and non‐native live oaks, Quercus virginianaMill., Quercus fusiformisSmall, and Quercus geminataSmall (Fagaceae). In general, we found evidence for immigrant inviability when B. treatae populations colonized non‐native host species. However, patterns were variable among years, suggesting that episodic events may play an important role in connecting ecologically divergent populations.
Keywords:ecological speciation  hypersensitive response  local adaptation  barriers to gene flow     Quercus     Hymenoptera  Cynipidae  Fagaceae
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