Evolution of male genitalia in the Drosophila repleta species group (Diptera: Drosophilidae)

被引:2
|
作者
Stefanini, Manuel I. [1 ,2 ]
Gottschalk, Marco S. [3 ]
Calvo, Natalia S. [4 ]
Soto, Ignacio M. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Buenos Aires, Fac Ciencias Exactas & Nat, Dept Ecol Genet & Evoluc, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[2] UBA, CONICET, Inst Ecol Genet & Evoluc Buenos Aires IEGEBA, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[3] Univ Fed Pelotas, Inst Biol, Dept Ecol Zool & Genet, Pelotas, RS, Brazil
[4] UNL, CONICET, Inst Nacl Limnol, Santa Fe, Argentina
关键词
adaptive radiation; cactophilia; evolutionary rates; lock-and-key; punctuated evolution; reproductive isolation; LOCK-AND-KEY; CACTOPHILIC DROSOPHILA; STABILIZING SELECTION; SEXUAL SELECTION; ANIMAL GENITALIA; MORPHOLOGICAL EVOLUTION; ECOLOGICAL OPPORTUNITY; DIVERGENT EVOLUTION; PHYLOGENETIC SIGNAL; DIVERSIFICATION;
D O I
10.1111/jeb.13913
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The Drosophila repleta group comprises more than one hundred species that inhabit several environments in the Neotropics and use different hosts as rearing and feeding resources. Rather homogeneous in their external morphology, they are generally distinguished by the male genitalia, seemingly their fastest evolving morphological trait, constituting an excellent model to study patterns of genital evolution in the context of a continental adaptive radiation. Although much is known about the evolution of animal genitalia at population level, surveys on macroevolutionary scale of this phenomenon are scarce. This study used a suite of phylogenetic comparative methods to elucidate the macroevolutionary patterns of genital evolution through deep time and large continental scales. Our results indicate that male genital size and some aspects of shape have been evolving by speciational evolution, probably due to the microevolutionary processes involved in species mate recognition. In contrast, several features of the aedeagus shape seemed to have evolved in a gradual fashion, with heterogeneous evolutionary phenotypic rates among clades. In general, the tempo of the evolution of aedeagus morphology was constant from the origin of the group until the Pliocene, when it accelerated in some clades that diversified mainly in this period. The incidence of novel ecological conditions in the tempo of aedeagus evolution and the relationship between species mate recognition and speciation in the Drosophila repleta group are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:1488 / 1502
页数:15
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