生物
分类交配
生殖隔离
生态物种形成
交配
寄主(生物学)
食草动物
昆虫
生态学
表型可塑性
性信息素
遗传算法
基因流
进化生物学
动物
遗传变异
基因
遗传学
人口
人口学
社会学
作者
Sven Geiselhardt,Tobias Otte,Monika Hilker
标识
DOI:10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01816.x
摘要
Abstract The role of phenotypical plasticity in ecological speciation and the evolution of sexual isolation remains largely unknown. We investigated whether or not divergent host plant use in an herbivorous insect causes assortative mating by phenotypically altering traits involved in mate recognition. We found that males of the mustard leaf beetle Phaedon cochleariae preferred to mate with females that were reared on the same plant species to females provided with a different plant species, based on divergent cuticular hydrocarbon profiles that serve as contact pheromones. The cuticular hydrocarbon phenotypes of the beetles were host plant specific and changed within 2 weeks after a shift to a novel host plant species. We suggest that plant‐induced phenotypic divergence in mate recognition cues may act as an early barrier to gene flow between herbivorous insect populations on alternative host species, preceding genetic divergence and thus, promoting ecological speciation.
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