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Journal ArticleDOI

Distinguishing intrapopulational categories of plants by their insect faunas: galls on rabbitbrush.

TLDR
Knowledge of the distributions of insect galls may be useful for augmenting the level of separation, obtained by morphological measurements, among intrapopulational categories of plant genotypes.
Abstract
Within a population of rubber rabbitbrush, Chrysothamnus nauseosus, the subspecies C. nauseosus consimilis and C. nauseosus hololeucus, and a third unidentified group were better segregated by their insect galls, than by differences in plant morphology. This level of segregation was further increased when morphological measurements and counts of insect galls were analyzed simultaneously. We interpret this result to mean that plant morphology and insect distributions reflect two different, perhaps overlapping, portions of the host's genome. By using both sets of characters concurrently, rather than either set independently, we increased the portion of the plant's genome being sampled and increased the probability of detecting differences among host genotypes. Hence, knowledge of the distributions of insect galls may be useful for augmenting the level of separation, obtained by morphological measurements, among intrapopulational categories of plant genotypes. This application may be of greatest benefit when hybridization blurs morphological distinctions among plant taxa, when morphological traits are highly variable within genotypes, or when ephemeral morphological traits (e.g., leaves, flowers) are not available for measurements.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

How Many Species of Gall-Inducing Insects Are There on Earth, and Where Are They?

TL;DR: An increased sampling effort in tropical regions should fill the taxonomy gap represented by gall-inducing insects and possibly change the biogeographic patterns described so far.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biodiversity of galling insects: historical, community and habitat effects in four neotropical savannas

TL;DR: The results corroborate the hypothesis that predicts that habitat stress is the main factor generating the patterns of galling insect richness in Brazilian savannas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community specificity: life and afterlife effects of genes

TL;DR: A review of the literature shows that genetic specificity by communities appears to be fundamentally important, suggesting that specificity is a major driver of the biodiversity and stability of the world's ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are gall midge species (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) host-plant specialists?

TL;DR: It is concluded that gall morphotypes associated with information on the host plant species and attacked organs are reliable surrogates of the gall-inducing species.
Journal ArticleDOI

A genetic similarity rule determines arthropod community structure.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define a genetic similarity rule that predicts how genetic variation in a dominant plant affects the structure of an arthropod community, and apply it to hybridizing cottonwood species where plant genetic variation determines plant-animal interactions and structures a dependent community of leaf-modifying arthropods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Analyzing tables of statistical tests

TL;DR: Technique non parametrique pour la signification statistique de tables de tests utilisees dans les etudes sur l'evolution notamment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Versus Morphological Approaches to Systematics

TL;DR: This review outlines the advantages of both morphological and molecular approaches to systematics and discusses some common differences in assumptions and methods of analysis that can lead to spurious conflict between studies, especially those concerning phylogenetic reconstruction.
Book

Ecology of Plant Galls

M. S. Mani
Book ChapterDOI

Finding and Accepting Host Plants

TL;DR: The plant-based resource units insects use for refugia, mating sites, and food vary in two fundamental ways; the quality of resources offered by a given plant varies widely with factors such as plant tissue, growth stage, and plant nutritional states.
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