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Hydrocarbon Divergence And Reproductive Isolation In Timema Stick Insects

Resource type
Date created
2013
Authors/Contributors
Abstract
BackgroundIndividuals commonly prefer certain trait values over others when choosing their mates. If such preferences diverge between populations, they can generate behavioral reproductive isolation and thereby contribute to speciation. Reproductive isolation in insects often involves chemical communication, and cuticular hydrocarbons, in particular, serve as mate recognition signals in many species. We combined data on female cuticular hydrocarbons, interspecific mating propensity, and phylogenetics to evaluate the role of cuticular hydrocarbons in diversification of Timema walking-sticks.ResultsHydrocarbon profiles differed substantially among the nine analyzed species, as well as between partially reproductively-isolated T. cristinae populations adapted to different host plants. In no-choice trials, mating was more likely between species with similar than divergent hydrocarbon profiles, even after correcting for genetic divergences. The macroevolution of hydrocarbon profiles, along a Timema species phylogeny, fits best with a punctuated model of phenotypic change concentrated around speciation events, consistent with change driven by selection during the evolution of reproductive isolation.ConclusionAltogether, our data indicate that cuticular hydrocarbon profiles vary among Timema species and populations, and that most evolutionary change in hydrocarbon profiles occurs in association with speciation events. Similarities in hydrocarbon profiles between species are correlated with interspecific mating propensities, suggesting a role for cuticular hydrocarbon profiles in mate choice and speciation in the genus Timema.
Document
Published as
BMC Evolutionary Biology 2013, 13:151 doi:10.1186/1471-2148-13-151
Publication title
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Document title
Hydrocarbon Divergence And Reproductive Isolation In Timema Stick Insects
Date
2013
Volume
13
Issue
151
Publisher DOI
10.1186/1471-2148-13-151
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the author(s).
Scholarly level
Peer reviewed?
Yes
Language
English
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1471-2148-13-151.pdf 938.74 KB

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