Publications by authors named "Danielle K Herrig"

Rapidly evolving taxa are excellent models for understanding the mechanisms that give rise to biodiversity. However, developing an accurate historical framework for comparative analysis of such lineages remains a challenge due to ubiquitous incomplete lineage sorting (ILS) and introgression. Here, we use a whole-genome alignment, multiple locus-sampling strategies, and summary-tree and single nucleotide polymorphism-based species-tree methods to infer a species tree for eastern North American Neodiprion species, a clade of pine-feeding sawflies (Order: Hymenopteran; Family: Diprionidae).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the predictability of adaptive genetic changes, particularly in gene family expansions and contractions, within the redheaded pine sawfly, a species evolved from angiosperm feeders.
  • Researchers found recent expansions in specific gene families related to chemosensory, detoxification, and immunity functions, indicating positive selection among gustatory receptors that likely help detect bitter compounds.
  • The findings support the idea that gene families involved in ecological interactions can undergo predictable expansions and contractions in response to new selection pressures, suggesting a need for more comparative studies across various insect species.
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Though seemingly bizarre, the dramatic morphological and ecological transformation that occurs when immature life stages metamorphose into reproductive adults is one of the most successful developmental strategies on the planet. The adaptive decoupling hypothesis (ADH) proposes that metamorphosis is an adaptation for breaking developmental links between traits expressed in different life stages, thereby facilitating their independent evolution when exposed to opposing selection pressures. Here, we draw inspiration from the ADH to develop a conceptual framework for understanding changes in gene expression across ontogeny.

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Species hybridization, and thus the potential for gene flow, was once viewed as reproductive mistake. However, recent analysis based on large datasets and newly developed models suggest that gene exchange is not as rare as originally suspected. To investigate the history and speciation of the closely related species Drosophila subobscura, D.

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