Host shifting and host sharing in a genus of specialist flies diversifying alongside their sunflower hosts
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-01 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRP286078
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Congeneric parasites are unlikely to specialize on the same tissues of the same host species, likely because of strong multifarious selection against niche overlap. Exceptions where multiple congeneric species overlap on the same tissues may therefore reveal important insights into the ecological factors underlying the origins and maintenance of diversity. Larvae of sunflower maggot flies in genus Strauzia feed on the pith of plants in the family Asteraceae. Although Strauzia tend to be host specialists, some species overlap in their host use. To resolve the origins of host sharing among these specialist flies, we used reduced representation genomic sequencing to infer the first multilocus phylogeny of genus Strauzia. Our results show that Helianthus tuberosus and Helianthus grosseserratus each host three different fly species, and that the flies co-occurring on a host are not one anothers closest relatives. Though this pattern implies that host sharing is most likely the result of host shifts, these may not be host shifts in the conventional sense of an insect moving onto an entirely new plant. Many hosts of Strauzia belong to a young clade of perennial sunflowers noted for their frequent introgression and hybrid speciation events. In at least one case, flies may have converged upon a host after their respective ancestral host plants hybridized to form a new sunflower species. Broadly, we suggest that rapid and recent adaptive introgression and speciation in this group of plants may have instigated the rapid diversification of their phytophagous fly associates, including the convergence of more than one species onto the same shared host plants.
创建时间:
2024-04-17



