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Diversification and spatial structuring in the mutualism between Ficus septica and its pollinating wasps in insular South East Asia.

Lillian Jennifer RodriguezAnthony BainLien-Siang ChouLucie ConchouAstrid CruaudRegielene GonzalesMartine Hossaert-McKeyJean-Yves RasplusHsy-Yu TzengFinn Kjellberg
Published in: BMC evolutionary biology (2017)
F. septica and its black pollinator clades exhibited similar geographic structuring. This could be due originally to geographic barriers leading to isolation, local adaptation, and finally co-structuring. Nevertheless, the co-occurrence of two black pollinator species on Lanyu island suggests that the parapatric distribution of the black clades is now maintained by the inability of migrating individuals of black pollinators to establish populations outside their range. On the other hand, the distribution of the yellow clade strongly suggests an initial case of character displacement followed by subsequent range extension: in our study system, phenotypic or microevolutionary plasticity has allowed the yellow clade to colonise hosts presenting distinct odours. Hence, while variation in receptive fig odours allows specificity in the interaction, this variation does not necessarily lead to coevolutionary plant-insect diversification. Globally, our results evidence evolutionary plasticity in the fig-fig wasp mutualism. This is the first documentation of the presence of two distinct processes in pollinating fig wasp diversification on a host species: the formation of vicariant species and the co-occurrence of other species over large parts of their ranges probably made possible by character displacement.
Keyphrases
  • genetic diversity
  • gene expression
  • zika virus