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A solanum beetle on a fabaceous weed: Possible rapid progress of adaptation to a novel host-plant in a geographical context
Authors:Naoyuki Fujiyama  Hideki Ueno  Sih Kahono  Sri Hartini  Haruo Katakura
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Yamagata University, Yamagata, Japan;2. Laboratory of Biology, Faculty of Education and Human Sciences, Niigata University, Niigata, Japan

Deceased January 2005.;3. Research Center for Applied Zoology, Research Organization of Life Sciences and Environment, National Research and Innovation Agency, Cibinong, Indonesia;4. Zoology Division, Research Center for Biology, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Cibinong, Indonesia;5. The Hokkaido University Museum, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

Abstract:Our knowledge on how the local distribution pattern of ordinary and novel hosts promotes or hinders the progress of adaptation to the novel hosts by phytophagous insects is limited. The herbivorous ladybird beetle Henosepilachna vigintioctopunctata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) depends mainly on solanaceous plants as hosts; the major wild host of this beetle species in Java, Indonesia, is Solanum torvum. However, in several regions of Southeast Asia, including Java, H. vigintioctopunctata also occurs on the introduced fabaceous weed, Centrosema molle. Circumstantial evidence indicates that the use of C. molle by beetles became frequent in the very early 2000s in East Java. In the present study, based on laboratory and field data obtained from 2003 to 2005, we evaluated the degree of adaptation to C. molle by H. vigintioctopunctata populations from East Java and documented the geographic pattern of host-plant distribution in East Java. Laboratory experiments revealed that the beetles from East Java possessed the highest degree of adaptation to C. molle among the beetle populations thus far investigated, suggesting that the adaptation to C. molle by beetles proceeded quite rapidly in East Java in the early 2000s. Meanwhile, field surveys showed that the habitats in East Java consisted of mosaics with sites where only C. molle was distributed and sites where C. molle and solanaceous plants co-occurred. We discussed the role of such geographical structure of habitats in promoting the rapid adaptation of H. vigintioctopunctata to C. molle in East Java.
Keywords:adult feeding preference  Coccinellidae  Coleoptera  geographic distribution  Henosepilachna vigintioctopunctata  larval developmental performance  novel host use
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