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Hybridization studies on the host races of eurosta solidaginis: implications for sympatric speciation.

TLDR
Evidence is found for disruptive selection for host use, which is a critical assumption of sympatric speciation models, and high survival of F1, F2, and backcross hybrids on some plant genotypes in some years supported the host adaptation hypothesis.
Abstract
We studied the inheritance of survival ability in host-associated populations of the tephritid fly, Eurosta solidaginis, to test predictions of sympatric speciation models. Eurosta solidaginis induces galls on two species of goldenrod, Solidago altissima and S. gigantea. The host-associated populations have been hypothesized to be host races that originated in sympatry (Craig et al. 1993). We found evidence for disruptive selection for host use, which is a critical assumption of sympatric speciation models. Each host race had higher survival rates on their host plant than on the alternative host. F1 and backcross hybrids also had lower survival rates than the pure host-race flies on their host plant. Since assortative mating occurs due to host-plant preference (Craig et al. 1993) this would select for divergence in host preference. Low hybrid survival could have been due to strong genetic incompatibilities of the populations or due to host adaptation by each population. Strong genetic incompatibilities would result in poor survival on all host plants, while host adaptation could result in low overall survival with high hybrid survival on some host plants with particularly "benign" environments. High survival of F1 , F2 , and backcross hybrids on some plant genotypes in some years supported the host adaptation hypothesis. F1 flies mated and oviposited normally and produced viable F2 and backcross hybrids indicating gene flow is possible between the host races. A few flies developed and emerged on the alternative host plant. This demonstrates that genes necessary to utilize the alternative host exist in both host races. This could have facilitated the origin of one of the populations via a host shift from the ancestral host. The inheritance of survival ability appears to be an autosomal trait. We did not find evidence that survival ability was maternally influenced or sex linked.

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Citations
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Ecology and the origin of species

TL;DR: The mechanisms that give rise to new species by divergent selection are reviewed, the alternatives are compared, recent tests in nature are summarized, and areas requiring research are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning of action through adaptive combination of motor primitives

TL;DR: This work shows that humans learn the dynamics of reaching movements through a flexible combination of primitives that have gaussian-like tuning functions encoding hand velocity, and finds close agreement between the predicted limitations and the subjects’ adaptation to new force fields.
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Host races in plant–feeding insects and their importance in sympatric speciation

TL;DR: This work provides verifiable criteria to distinguish host races from other biotypes, and discusses applications of an understanding of host races in conservation and in managing adaptation by pests to control strategies, including those involving biological control or transgenic parasite-resistant plants.
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Sympatric speciation in phytophagous insects: moving beyond controversy?

TL;DR: The evidence for sympatric speciation via host shifting for phytophagous insects is reviewed and a set of testable predictions for distinguishing geographic mode (allopatric versus sympatrics) of divergence are proposed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Competition and Biodiversity in Spatially Structured Habitats

David Tilman
- 01 Jan 1994 - 
TL;DR: The spatial competition hypothesis seems to explain the coexistence of the numerous plant species that compete for a single limiting resource in the grasslands of Cedar Creek Natural History Area and provides a testable, alternative explanation for other high diversity communities, such as tropical forests.
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Sex ratio and unisexual sterility in hybrid animals

TL;DR: When in theF1 offspring of a cross between two animal species or races one sex is absent, rare, or sterile, that sex is always the heterozygous sex.
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Laboratory experiments on speciation: what have we learned in 40 years?

TL;DR: The role of geographical separation in generating allopatry has been overemphasized in the past and its role in generating diminished gene flow in combination with strong, discontinuous, and multifarious divergent selection, has been largely unappreciated.
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Skepticism towards santa rosalia, or why are there so few kinds of animals?

TL;DR: In a classic paper, Hutchinson (1959) set the tone for much of the ecological work done during the past 20 years by suggesting that ecologists try to explain the numbers of species of animals by explaining how the species could coexist.
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Sympatric host race formation and speciation in frugivorous flies of the genus rhagoletis (diptera, tephritidae).

TL;DR: The objective of this paper is to point out how the biological attributes of these flies may have permitted new forms to arise rapidly in the absence of geographical barriers to gene flow.
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