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Unlocking the "Black box": internal female genitalia in Sepsidae (Diptera) evolve fast and are species-specific

TLDR
The internal female genitalia are diverse in Sepsidae and diagnostic for all species, and fast-evolving structures like the ventral receptacle and dorsal sclerite are likely involved in post-copulatory sexual selection.
Abstract
The species-specificity of male genitalia has been well documented in many insect groups and sexual selection has been proposed as the evolutionary force driving the often rapid, morphological divergence. The internal female genitalia, in sharp contrast, remain poorly studied. Here, we present the first comparative study of the internal reproductive system of Sepsidae. We test the species-specificity of the female genitalia by comparing recently diverged sister taxa. We also compare the rate of change in female morphological characters with the rate of fast-evolving, molecular and behavioral characters. We describe the ectodermal parts of the female reproductive tract for 41 species representing 21 of the 37 described genera and define 19 morphological characters with discontinuous variation found in eight structures that are part of the reproductive tract. Using a well-resolved molecular phylogeny based on 10 genes, we reconstruct the evolution of these characters across the family [120 steps; Consistency Index (CI): 0.41]. Two structures, in particular, evolve faster than the rest. The first is the ventral receptacle, which is a secondary sperm storage organ. It accounts for more than half of all the evolutionary changes observed (7 characters; 61 steps; CI: 0.46). It is morphologically diverse across genera, can be bi-lobed or multi-chambered (up to 80 chambers), and is strongly sclerotized in one clade. The second structure is the dorsal sclerite, which is present in all sepsids except Orygma luctuosum and Ortalischema albitarse. It is associated with the opening of the spermathecal ducts and is often distinct even among sister species (4 characters; 16 steps; CI: 0.56). We find the internal female genitalia are diverse in Sepsidae and diagnostic for all species. In particular, fast-evolving structures like the ventral receptacle and dorsal sclerite are likely involved in post-copulatory sexual selection. In comparison to behavioral and molecular data, the female structures are evolving 2/3 as fast as the non-constant third positions of the COI barcoding gene. They display less convergent evolution in characters (CI = 0.54) than the third positions or sepsid mating behavior (CI COI = 0.36; CIBEHAV = 0.45).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual selection and genital evolution

TL;DR: The literature on insect genital evolution is synthesised, and this synthesis is used to address the debate over the mechanisms of selection most likely to explain observed patterns of macroevolutionary divergence in genital morphology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genital Evolution : Why Are Females Still Understudied?

TL;DR: There remains a bias towards studying male genitalia; here the extent of that bias is examined and its possible causes are examined.
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Mechanisms and Evidence of Genital Coevolution: The Roles of Natural Selection, Mate Choice, and Sexual Conflict

TL;DR: The diverse mechanisms of genital coevolution that include natural selection, female mate choice, male-male competition, and how their interactions generate sexual conflict that can lead to sexually antagonistic coev evolution are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sperm form and function: what do we know about the role of sexual selection?

TL;DR: The challenges of examining sperm morphology in an evolutionary context are discussed and why the understanding of it is far from complete, and empirical evidence for how sexual selection theory applies to the evolution of sperm form and function is reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid diversification of sperm precedence traits and processes among three sibling Drosophila species.

TL;DR: These species differences are evaluated in light of concurrent investigations of within‐population variation in competitive fertilization success and postmating/prezygotic reproductive isolation in hybrid matings between species to forge an understanding of the relationship between microevolutionary processes and macroevolutionARY patterns as pertains to postcopulatory sexual selection in this group.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Barcoding animal life: cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 divergences among closely related species

TL;DR: It is indicated that sequence divergences at COI regularly enable the discrimination of closely allied species in all animal phyla except the Cnidaria and constraints on intraspecific mitochondrial DNA divergence arising through selective sweeps mediated via interactions with the nuclear genome.
BookDOI

Female control : sexual selection by cryptic female choice

TL;DR: A growing body of evidence has begun to reveal flaws in the traditional assumption of female passivity and lack of discrimination after copulation has begun as discussed by the authors, and evidence from various fields indicates that such selectivity by females may be the norm rather than the exception.
Journal ArticleDOI

SequenceMatrix: concatenation software for the fast assembly of multi‐gene datasets with character set and codon information

TL;DR: SequenceMatrix as discussed by the authors is a Java-based software that facilitates the assembly and analysis of multi-gene datasets by dragging and dropping FASTA, NEXUS, or TNT files with aligned sequences into the program window.