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Can the tight co-speciation between reed beetles (Col., Chrysomelidae,Donaciinae) and their bacterial endosymbionts,which provide cocoon material,clarify the deeper phylogeny of the hosts?
Authors:Gregor Kölsch  Bo V Pedersen
Institution:1. CIRAD, CBGP, Montpellier, France;2. CBGP, CIRAD, INRA, IRD, Montpellier SupAgro, University Montpellier, Montpellier, France;3. Institute of Integrative Biology, Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom;4. Biosystematics Group, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:In most mutualistic symbioses of insects and intracellular bacteria, the endosymbionts provide additional nutrients to a host that feeds on an unbalanced diet. A strictly vertical transmission leads to co-speciation between the two partners. We have investigated an insect-bacteria relationship with a non-nutritional basis. The reed beetles (Donaciinae) harbor bacteria that produce a secretion used by the larvae for building a cocoon for pupation in mud underwater. The 16S rRNA of the bacteria and the cytochrome c oxidase I and elongation factor 1alpha of the beetles have been partially sequenced. The bacterial and the host phylogeny were highly congruent. Larger taxonomic units (genera) and host species groups/pairs have been recovered in the bacterial phylogeny. The symbiont data still cannot clarify the hitherto unresolved deeper phylogeny of the hosts, which is interpreted as a sign of rapid adaptive radiation of the reed beetles soon after their origin. The rate of sequence evolution among/within host species is discussed.
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