A shift in the host web occupancy of dew‐drop spiders associated with genetic divergence in the Southwest Pacific

Author:

Elias Noraya U.12,Responte Mae A.134,Wu Cheng‐Yu1,Chiu Yi‐Fan1,Peng Po1,Liao Hauchuan5,Brown Rafe M.6,Su Yong‐Chao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Science and Environmental Biology, College of Life Science Kaohsiung Medical University Kaohsiung Taiwan

2. Mindanao State University‐Malabang Community High School Malabang Lanao del Sur Philippines

3. Graduate Institute of Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University Kaohsiung Taiwan

4. Department of Biological Sciences and Environmental Studies, College of Science and Mathematics University of the Philippines Mindanao Davao City Philippines

5. Systematic Zoology Laboratory, Department of Biological Sciences Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan

6. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Biodiversity Institute University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas USA

Abstract

AbstractAimWe assessed the population genetic structure of the kleptoparasitic spider Argyrodes bonadea across the Southwestern Pacific islands. Our aim is to evaluate the impact of overseas distances and, in particular, the Kerama gap, as potential drivers of genetic differentiation. If no relationship exists, then we assume dispersal following adaptive change as alternative non‐vicariant mechanism that generates divergence.LocationSouthwestern Pacific Islands.Taxon Argyrodes bonadea. MethodsWe used mitochondrial Cytochrome Oxidase 1 (CO1) gene sequences and Restriction Site‐associated DNA Sequencing (RAD‐seq) for our analyses.ResultsTwo strongly supported lineages, an Amami‐Okinawa Lineage (AOL) and an Austral‐Asia Lineage (AAL), correspond to two separate clades, roughly divided by the Kerama Gap, in phylogenetic trees estimated here. However, species delimitation led to the interpretation of only a single species present. The AOL exhibits complex, geographically structured host web spider species specificity, wherein the Amami population utilizes Cyrtophora, but AOL samples in Okinawa associate exclusively with Nephila—and yet all broadly distributed AAL populations show no evidence of host web spider species specificity.Main ConclusionThe population boundary between AOL and AAL likely results from local adaptation to novel hosts—instead of isolation by the Kerama Gap—following long‐distance dispersal and range expansion. Our results suggest kleptoparasitic spiders have the capacity to overcome permanent deep‐sea barriers and colonize distant landmasses. Whereas peripheral populations (AOL) demonstrate the capacity for specialization to a single host, which may have contributed to genetic differentiation and isolation, the broadly distributed AAL persists and has successfully expanded its geographical range as a host generalist, which may contribute to ongoing gene flow inferred in this study.

Funder

National Science and Technology Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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