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A geographical mosaic of coevolution in a slave-making host-parasite system
Authors:Ruano F  Devers S  Sanllorente O  Errard C  Tinaut A  Lenoir A
Institution:Department of Animal Biology, University of Granada, Granada, Spain. fruano@ugr.es
Abstract:Three different isolated populations of the slave‐making ant Rossomyrmex minuchae, sympatric with its obligate host Proformica longiseta, are known from the high mountains of southern Spain. To test the prediction that the slave‐maker and its host represent a coevolutionary geographical mosaic, we studied the variation in the cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) as the trait most likely to show the selection mosaic, plus trait remixing by the gene flow in the populations of each species by means of microsatellites. We found within populations, host and parasite had more similar CHC profiles than between the populations or between parasites and allopatric hosts. The differences between the CHC profiles of the host and parasite, which may be responsible for the level of tolerance towards the parasite, varied between the populations suggesting the existence of a selection mosaic of coevolution. Furthermore, P. longiseta showed higher gene flow than R. minuchae, which would allow local variation in the coevolution of the host and parasite while allowing some trait remixing.
Keywords:coevolution  cuticular hydrocarbons  gene flow  geographical mosaic  host–parasite system  Proformica longiseta  resistance  Rossomyrmex minuchae  tolerance
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