Evolutionary dynamics of specialisation in herbivorous stick insects.
Chaparral biome
Timema stick insect
host shift
plant secondary metabolites
plant-herbivore interaction
realised vs. fundamental niche
redwood
Journal
Ecology letters
ISSN: 1461-0248
Titre abrégé: Ecol Lett
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101121949
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Feb 2019
Feb 2019
Historique:
received:
30
07
2018
revised:
01
09
2018
revised:
24
10
2018
accepted:
10
11
2018
pubmed:
21
12
2018
medline:
8
8
2019
entrez:
21
12
2018
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Understanding the evolutionary dynamics underlying herbivorous insect mega-diversity requires investigating the ability of insects to shift and adapt to different host plants. Feeding experiments with nine related stick insect species revealed that insects retain the ability to use ancestral host plants after shifting to novel hosts, with host plant shifts generating fundamental feeding niche expansions. These expansions were, however, not accompanied by expansions of the realised feeding niches, as species on novel hosts are generally ecologically specialised. For shifts from angiosperm to chemically challenging conifer hosts, generalist fundamental feeding niches even evolved jointly with strong host plant specialisation, indicating that host plant specialisation is not driven by constraints imposed by plant chemistry. By coupling analyses of plant chemical compounds, fundamental and ecological feeding niches in multiple insect species, we provide novel insights into the evolutionary dynamics of host range expansion and contraction in herbivorous insects.
Types de publication
Letter
Langues
eng
Pagination
354-364Subventions
Organisme : Swiss FNS
ID : PP00P3_139013
Organisme : Swiss FNS
ID : PP00P3_170627
Organisme : Swiss Zoological Society
Informations de copyright
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd/CNRS.