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Concordant phylogeography and cryptic speciation in two Western Palaearctic oak gall parasitoid species complexes
Authors:JAMES A NICHOLLS  SONJA PREUSS  ALEXANDER HAYWARD  GEORGE MELIKA  GYÖRGY CSÓKA  JOSÉ‐LUIS NIEVES‐ALDREY  RICHARD R ASKEW  MAJID TAVAKOLI  KARSTEN SCHÖNROGGE  GRAHAM N STONE
Institution:1. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Labs, King’s Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK;2. Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK;3. Pest Diagnostic Laboratory, Plant Protection & Soil Conservation Directorate of County Vas, Ambrozy setany 2, 9762 Tanakajd, Hungary;4. Hungarian Forest Research Institute, Mátrafüred Research Station, 3232?Mátrafüred, Hungary;5. Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), c/José Gutiérrez Abascal, 2, Madrid E‐28006, Spain;6. 5 Beeston Hall Mews, Beeston, Tarporley, Cheshire CW6 9TZ, UK;7. Lorestan Agricultural and Natural Resources Research Center, Khorramabad, Lorestan, P.O. Box 348, Iran;8. CEH Wallingford, Maclean Building, Benson Lane, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 8BB, UK
Abstract:Little is known about the evolutionary history of most complex multi‐trophic insect communities. Widespread species from different trophic levels might evolve in parallel, showing similar spatial patterns and either congruent temporal patterns (Contemporary Host‐tracking) or later divergence in higher trophic levels (Delayed Host‐tracking). Alternatively, host shifts by natural enemies among communities centred on different host resources could disrupt any common community phylogeographic pattern. We examined these alternative models using two Megastigmus parasitoid morphospecies associated with oak cynipid galls sampled throughout their Western Palaearctic distributions. Based on existing host cynipid data, a parallel evolution model predicts that eastern regions of the Western Palaearctic should contain ancestral populations with range expansions across Europe about 1.6 million years ago and deeper species‐level divergence at both 8–9 and 4–5 million years ago. Sequence data from mitochondrial cytochrome b and multiple nuclear genes showed similar phylogenetic patterns and revealed cryptic genetic species within both morphospecies, indicating greater diversity in these communities than previously thought. Phylogeographic divergence was apparent in most cryptic species between relatively stable, diverse, putatively ancestral populations in Asia Minor and the Middle East, and genetically depauperate, rapidly expanding populations in Europe, paralleling patterns in host gallwasp species. Mitochondrial and nuclear data also suggested that Europe may have been colonized multiple times from eastern source populations since the late Miocene. Temporal patterns of lineage divergence were congruent within and across trophic levels, supporting the Contemporary Host‐tracking Hypothesis for community evolution.
Keywords:community evolution  comparative phylogeography  cryptic species  host‐tracking  Megastigmus  oak gall
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