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When rare species become endangered: cryptic speciation in myrmecophilous hoverflies
Authors:KARSTEN SCHÖNROGGE  BOYD BARR  JUDITH C WARDLAW  EMMA NAPPER  MICHAEL G GARDNER  JOHN BREEN  GRAHAM W ELMES  JEREMY A THOMAS
Institution:Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, CEH Dorset, Winfrith Technology Centre, Dorchester, Dorset, DT2 8ZD, UK;Logierait School House, Ballinluig, Pitlochry, PH9 OLG, UK;IACR-Rothamsted, Biological and Ecological Chemistry Department, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, AL5 2JQ, UK;School of Biological Sciences Bassett Crescent East, Southampton, SO 16 7PX, UK;Department of Life Science, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
Abstract:The myrmecophilous hoverfly, Microdon mutabilis, is listed as a ‘Rare’ or ‘Nationally Notable Species’ in UK Red Data Books. As an obligate social parasite, feeding only from ant colonies, its life‐style satisfies theoretical conditions under which cryptic speciation is predicted to evolve; namely, strong selection for nonmorphological adaptations that enhance its exploitation of a local subspecies or populations of its host. Samples of larvae and pupae in Ireland, Scotland and England showed that M. mutabilis exploits a single and different host ant species on different sites across its range. In nine southern English colonies, 95.6% of infested nests were of Myrmica scabrinodis whereas in six Irish and two Scottish colonies 100% and 94.2%, respectively, of the infested nests were of Formica lemani, despite M. scabrinodis being common at all sites. Although the adults from ‘scabrinodis’ (and lemani) populations are cryptic, morphometric measurements of pupae showed consistent diagnostic characters that were sufficiently distinct for these ecotypes to be classed as separate species. We conclude that M. mutabilis is the ‘lemani‐type’ and designate the ‘scabrinodis‐type’ as a new species, Microdon myrmicae spec. nov. Thus, one of the listed threatened species of the British Isles becomes two species, each possessing about half the number of populations and occupying half the range of the original ‘species’. Each also inhabits a different serai stage within grassland or heathland, and will require a different management regime if its declining populations are to be conserved. ‘M. mutabilis’ is reported with other host ant species on the European continent. In the light of our results, these may prove to be additional cryptic species. We suggest that cryptic speciation is apt to evolve in species, such as myrmecophiles, endoparasites and koinobiont parasitoids, whose life‐styles result in strong selection on their physiological or behavioural characters. The implications for Red Data Book classifications and for practical conservation are discussed. © 2002 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2002, 75 , 291–300.
Keywords:cryptic species                        Formica                        Microdon mutabilis                        Microdon myrmicae                        myrme-cophily                        Myrmica                        Red Data Book
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