Ecology and Evolution (Oct 2021)

Host shifts in economically significant fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) with high degree of polyphagy

  • Jiayao He,
  • Ke Chen,
  • Fan Jiang,
  • Xubin Pan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8135
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 20
pp. 13692 – 13701

Abstract

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Abstract Insects tend to feed on related hosts. Coevolution tends to be dominated by interactions resulting from plant chemistry in defense strategies, and evolution of secondary metabolisms being in response to insect herbivory remains a classic explanation of coevolution. The present study examines whether evolutionary constraints existing in host associations of economically important fruit flies in the species‐rich tribe Dacini (Diptera: Tephritidae) and to what extent these species have evolved specialized dietary patterns. We found a strong effect of host phylogeny on associations on the 37 fruit flies tested, although the fruit fly species feeding on ripe commercially grown fruits that lost the toxic compounds after long‐term domestication are mostly polyphagous. We assessed the phylogenetic signal of host breadth across the fruit fly species, showing that the results were substantially different depending on partition levels. Further, we mapped main host family associations onto the fruit fly phylogeny and Cucurbitaceae has been inferred as the most likely ancestral host family for Dacini based on ancestral state reconstruction.

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