Abstract
AbstractWhy are some species sexually dimorphic while other closely related species are not? When the degree of sexual dimorphism varies within a genus, an integrative phylogenetic approach may help reveal underlying patterns favoring the evolution of dimorphism. While all female flies in genus Strauzia – a genus of true fruit flies – share a multiply-banded wing pattern, males of four species have patterns wherein bands have “coalesced” into a continuous dark streak across much of the wing. We find that the origin of coalesced male wing patterns and pronounced differences in male wing shape correlate with the presumed origin of host plant sharing in this genus. A survey of North American Tephritidae finds just three other genera with specialist species that share host plants. Each has one or more congeners with wing patterns unusual for that genus, and just one genus, Eutreta, has those unusual wing patterns only in the male sex. Eutreta is also the only other genus among this subset wherein, like Strauzia, males hold territories while females search for mates. Sharing the same hosts may result in reproductive character displacement, and when coupled with a biology wherein females actively search for males, may specifically favor sexually dimorphic wing patterns.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory