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Opposite macroevolutionary responses to environmental changes in grasses and insects during the Neogene grassland expansion.

Gael J KergoatFabien L CondamineEmmanuel F A ToussaintClaire Capdevielle-DulacAnne-Laure ClamensJérôme BarbutPaul Z GoldsteinBruno Le Ru
Published in: Nature communications (2018)
The rise of Neogene C4 grasslands is one of the most drastic changes recently experienced by the biosphere. A central - and widely debated - hypothesis posits that Neogene grasslands acted as a major adaptive zone for herbivore lineages. We test this hypothesis with a novel model system, the Sesamiina stemborer moths and their associated host-grasses. Using a comparative phylogenetic framework integrating paleoenvironmental proxies we recover a negative correlation between the evolutionary trajectories of insects and plants. Our results show that paleoenvironmental changes generated opposing macroevolutionary dynamics in this insect-plant system and call into question the role of grasslands as a universal adaptive cradle. This study illustrates the importance of implementing environmental proxies in diversification analyses to disentangle the relative impacts of biotic and abiotic drivers of macroevolutionary dynamics.
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