Genomic evidence for contrasting patterns of host‐associated genetic differentiation across shared host‐plant species in leaf‐ and bud‐galling sawflies

Author:

Michell Craig T.1ORCID,Wagner Natascha2ORCID,Mutanen Marko3,Lee Kyung Min3ORCID,Nyman Tommi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences University of Eastern Finland Joensuu Finland

2. Department of Systematics, Biodiversity and Evolution of Plants (with Herbarium) University of Goettingen Göttingen Germany

3. Ecology and Genetics Research Unit University of Oulu Oulu Finland

4. Department of Ecosystems in the Barents Region Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research Svanvik Norway

Abstract

AbstractResource specialization and ecological speciation arising through host‐associated genetic differentiation (HAD) are frequently invoked as an explanation for the high diversity of plant‐feeding insects and other organisms with a parasitic lifestyle. While genetic studies have demonstrated numerous examples of HAD in insect herbivores, the rarity of comparative studies means that we still lack an understanding of how deterministic HAD is, and whether patterns of host shifts can be predicted over evolutionary timescales. We applied genome‐wide single nucleotide polymorphism and mitochondrial DNA sequence data obtained through genome resequencing to define species limits and to compare host‐plant use in population samples of leaf‐ and bud‐galling sawflies (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae: Nematinae) collected from seven shared willow (Salicaceae:Salix) host species. To infer the repeatability of long‐term cophylogenetic patterns, we also contrasted the phylogenies of the two galler groups with each other as well as with the phylogeny of theirSalixhosts estimated based on RADseq data. We found clear evidence for host specialization and HAD in both of the focal galler groups, but also that leaf gallers are more specialized to single host species compared with most bud gallers. In contrast to bud gallers, leaf gallers also exhibited statistically significant cophylogenetic signal with theirSalixhosts. The observed discordant patterns of resource specialization and host shifts in two related galler groups that have radiated in parallel across a shared resource base indicate a lack of evolutionary repeatability in the focal system, and suggest that short‐ and long‐term host use and ecological diversification in plant‐feeding insects are dominated by stochasticity and/or lineage‐specific effects.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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