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      Evolution and comparative ecology of parthenogenesis in haplodiploid arthropods

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          Abstract

          Changes from sexual reproduction to female‐producing parthenogenesis (thelytoky) have great evolutionary and ecological consequences, but how many times parthenogenesis evolved in different animal taxa is unknown. We present the first exhaustive database covering 765 cases of parthenogenesis in haplodiploid (arrhenotokous) arthropods, and estimate frequencies of parthenogenesis in different taxonomic groups. We show that the frequency of parthenogenetic lineages extensively varies among groups (0–38% among genera), that many species have both sexual and parthenogenetic lineages and that polyploidy is very rare. Parthenogens are characterized by broad ecological niches: parasitoid and phytophagous parthenogenetic species consistently use more host species, and have larger, polewards extended geographic distributions than their sexual relatives. These differences did not solely evolve after the transition to parthenogenesis. Extant parthenogens often derive from sexual ancestors with relatively broad ecological niches and distributions. As these ecological attributes are associated with large population sizes, our results strongly suggests that transitions to parthenogenesis are more frequent in large sexual populations and/or that the risk of extinction of parthenogens with large population sizes is reduced. The species database presented here provides insights into the maintenance of sex and parthenogenesis in natural populations that are not taxon specific and opens perspectives for future comparative studies.

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          Destabilizing Hybridization, General-Purpose Genotypes and Geographic Parthenogenesis

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            The population biology of oak gall wasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae).

            Oak gall wasps (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae, Cynipini) are characterized by possession of complex cyclically parthenogenetic life cycles and the ability to induce a wide diversity of highly complex species- and generation-specific galls on oaks and other Fagaceae. The galls support species-rich, closed communities of inquilines and parasitoids that have become a model system in community ecology. We review recent advances in the ecology of oak cynipids, with particular emphasis on life cycle characteristics and the dynamics of the interactions between host plants, gall wasps, and natural enemies. We assess the importance of gall traits in structuring oak cynipid communities and summarize the evidence for bottom-up and top-down effects across trophic levels. We identify major unanswered questions and suggest approaches for the future.
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              The evolution of agriculture in beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae and Platypodinae).

              Beetles in the weevil subfamilies Scolytinae and Platypodinae are unusual in that they burrow as adults inside trees for feeding and oviposition. Some of these beetles are known as ambrosia beetles for their obligate mutualisms with asexual fungi--known as ambrosia fungi--that are derived from plant pathogens in the ascomycete group known as the ophiostomatoid fungi. Other beetles in these subfamilies are known as bark beetles and are associated with free-living, pathogenic ophiostomatoid fungi that facilitate beetle attack of phloem of trees with resin defenses. Using DNA sequences from six genes, including both copies of the nuclear gene encoding enolase, we performed a molecular phylogenetic study of bark and ambrosia beetles across these two subfamilies to establish the rate and direction of changes in life histories and their consequences for diversification. The ambrosia beetle habits have evolved repeatedly and are unreversed. The subfamily Platypodinae is derived from within the Scolytinae, near the tribe Scolytini. Comparison of the molecular branch lengths of ambrosia beetles and ambrosia fungi reveals a strong correlation, which a fungal molecular clock suggests spans 60 to 21 million years. Bark beetles have shifted from ancestral association with conifers to angiosperms and back again several times. Each shift to angiosperms is associated with elevated diversity, whereas the reverse shifts to conifers are associated with lowered diversity. The unusual habit of adult burrowing likely facilitated the diversification of these beetle-fungus associations, enabling them to use the biomass-rich resource that trees represent and set the stage for at least one origin of eusociality.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                C.J.van.der.Kooi@rug.nl
                Journal
                Evol Lett
                Evol Lett
                10.1002/(ISSN)2056-3744
                EVL3
                Evolution Letters
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2056-3744
                09 November 2017
                December 2017
                : 1
                : 6 ( doiID: 10.1002/evl3.2017.1.issue-6 )
                : 304-316
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Ecology and Evolution University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0613-7633
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1126-1535
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1945-5374
                Article
                EVL330
                10.1002/evl3.30
                6121848
                30283658
                7f44018d-10e8-4c9b-8d98-356a73399387
                © 2017 The Author(s). Evolution Letters published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE) and European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB).

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 05 June 2017
                : 11 September 2017
                : 13 September 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 4, Tables: 3, Pages: 13, Words: 7846
                Categories
                Letter
                Letters
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                evl330
                December 2017
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:version=5.4.7.1 mode:remove_FC converted:04.09.2018

                asexual reproduction,haplodiploidy,hymenoptera,niche breadth,thelytoky,thysanoptera,arrhenotoky,polyploidy

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