CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)

The remarkable diversity of plant-feeding insects could be explained by the dynamics of their plant associations, where host plant shifts and specialization onto a small fraction of available plants may promote diversification. Neotropical Adelpha butterflies contain a large number of species, and p...

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Main Author: Torres, Karina
Format: Others
Published: Scholarly Commons 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/3767
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4765&context=uop_etds
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spelling ndltd-pacific.edu-oai-scholarlycommons.pacific.edu-uop_etds-47652021-11-09T05:28:11Z CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE) Torres, Karina The remarkable diversity of plant-feeding insects could be explained by the dynamics of their plant associations, where host plant shifts and specialization onto a small fraction of available plants may promote diversification. Neotropical Adelpha butterflies contain a large number of species, and previous work indicated the colonization of a novel host plant family (Rubiaceae) fueled its rapid diversification. However, accumulating host records indicate wide taxonomic host breadth at family level and below. Here, we categorize Adelpha diet breadth based on known host plant relationships across the Neotropics and from Costa Rica, Ecuador and Brazil. We also use a diet breadth index that identifies plants used in similar ways by Adelpha, pointing to potential plant traits that could facilitate or prevent plant-insect interactions. We find that diet breadth in Adelpha is not likely to change at different geographic scales, and that regional resource specialization was uncommon. Additionally, the diversification fueled by the switch to Rubiacae, appears to have led to some lowland-clade Adelpha species specializing on a restricted subset of host genera and species within Rubiaceae, as well as in Urticaceae. In contrast, the A. serpa-group shows generalization, with each species tending to feed on its own set of several unrelated plant families. Taken together, these results indicate that Rubiaceae and additional plant families appear as important ecological factors that have promoted adaptations in Adelpha and host plant family-level switches have not always had the same effect on diversification, corroborating the importance of Rubiaceae for this butterfly genus. Further research involving detailed phylogenies is needed to investigate associations between changes in diet breadth and speciation events, and test hypotheses of diet evolution. 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/3767 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4765&context=uop_etds University of the Pacific Theses and Dissertations Scholarly Commons Ecology diversification host shift ordinated diet breadth resource specialization Rubiaceae Biology Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Life Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ecology
diversification
host shift
ordinated diet breadth
resource specialization
Rubiaceae
Biology
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Life Sciences
spellingShingle Ecology
diversification
host shift
ordinated diet breadth
resource specialization
Rubiaceae
Biology
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Life Sciences
Torres, Karina
CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
description The remarkable diversity of plant-feeding insects could be explained by the dynamics of their plant associations, where host plant shifts and specialization onto a small fraction of available plants may promote diversification. Neotropical Adelpha butterflies contain a large number of species, and previous work indicated the colonization of a novel host plant family (Rubiaceae) fueled its rapid diversification. However, accumulating host records indicate wide taxonomic host breadth at family level and below. Here, we categorize Adelpha diet breadth based on known host plant relationships across the Neotropics and from Costa Rica, Ecuador and Brazil. We also use a diet breadth index that identifies plants used in similar ways by Adelpha, pointing to potential plant traits that could facilitate or prevent plant-insect interactions. We find that diet breadth in Adelpha is not likely to change at different geographic scales, and that regional resource specialization was uncommon. Additionally, the diversification fueled by the switch to Rubiacae, appears to have led to some lowland-clade Adelpha species specializing on a restricted subset of host genera and species within Rubiaceae, as well as in Urticaceae. In contrast, the A. serpa-group shows generalization, with each species tending to feed on its own set of several unrelated plant families. Taken together, these results indicate that Rubiaceae and additional plant families appear as important ecological factors that have promoted adaptations in Adelpha and host plant family-level switches have not always had the same effect on diversification, corroborating the importance of Rubiaceae for this butterfly genus. Further research involving detailed phylogenies is needed to investigate associations between changes in diet breadth and speciation events, and test hypotheses of diet evolution.
author Torres, Karina
author_facet Torres, Karina
author_sort Torres, Karina
title CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
title_short CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
title_full CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
title_fullStr CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
title_full_unstemmed CLARIFYING PATTERNS IN HOST PLANT USE BY ADELPHA BUTTERFLIES (NYMPHALIDAE: LIMENITIDINAE)
title_sort clarifying patterns in host plant use by adelpha butterflies (nymphalidae: limenitidinae)
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2021
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/uop_etds/3767
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4765&context=uop_etds
work_keys_str_mv AT torreskarina clarifyingpatternsinhostplantusebyadelphabutterfliesnymphalidaelimenitidinae
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