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Population differentiation and genetic variation in performance on eight hosts in the pea aphid complex. | LitMetric

Population differentiation and genetic variation in performance on eight hosts in the pea aphid complex.

Evolution

Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, United Kingdom.

Published: October 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Phytophagous insects, such as pea aphids, often adapt to multiple host plants, leading to specialized populations and potential speciation.
  • A study investigated the performance of pea aphid clones from various host plants through a reciprocal experiment, revealing significant host-plant specialization.
  • Results indicated that while different populations show adaptation to their respective hosts, gene flow may occur primarily through high performance on the common host Vicia faba, limiting divergence.

Article Abstract

Phytophagous insects frequently use multiple host-plant species leading to the evolution of specialized host-adapted populations and sometimes eventually to speciation. Some insects are confronted with a large number of host-plant species, which may provide complex routes of gene flow between host-adapted populations. The pea aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum) attacks a broad range of plants in the Fabaceae and it is known that populations on Trifolium pratense and Medicago sativa can be highly specialized at exploiting these species. To find out whether adaptation to a broad range of co-occurring hosts has occurred, we tested the performance of pea aphid clones collected from eight host-plant genera on all of these plants in a reciprocal transfer experiment. We provide evidence for pervasive host-plant specialization. The high performance of all aphid clones on Vicia faba suggests that this host plant could be a site of gene flow between different populations that could limit further host-associated divergence. The genetic variance in host-plant usage was partitioned into within- and among-population components, which represent different levels of host adaptation. Little evidence of within-population trade-offs in performance on different plant species was found.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00468.xDOI Listing

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