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Nonadaptive host‐use specificity in tropical armored scale insects
Authors:Daniel A Peterson  Nate B Hardy  Geoffrey E Morse  Takao Itioka  Jiufeng Wei  Benjamin B Normark
Institution:1. Department of Biology and Graduate Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst MA, USA ; 2. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Auburn University, Auburn AL, USA ; 3. Department of Biology, University of San Diego, San Diego CA, USA ; 4. Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto Japan ; 5. College of Agriculture, Shanxi Agricultural University, Taigu China
Abstract:Most herbivorous insects are diet specialists in spite of the apparent advantages of being a generalist. This conundrum might be explained by fitness trade‐offs on alternative host plants, yet the evidence of such trade‐offs has been elusive. Another hypothesis is that specialization is nonadaptive, evolving through neutral population‐genetic processes and within the bounds of historical constraints. Here, we report on a striking lack of evidence for the adaptiveness of specificity in tropical canopy communities of armored scale insects. We find evidence of pervasive diet specialization, and find that host use is phylogenetically conservative, but also find that more‐specialized species occur on fewer of their potential hosts than do less‐specialized species, and are no more abundant where they do occur. Of course local communities might not reflect regional diversity patterns. But based on our samples, comprising hundreds of species of hosts and armored scale insects at two widely separated sites, more‐specialized species do not appear to outperform more generalist species.
Keywords:Diaspididae  ecological specialization  herbivory  host range  niche breadth  polyphagy
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