“…Protein venoms have been widely studied as models of gene family evolution (Fry et al, 2009(Fry et al, , 2006Wong and Belov, 2012), and evidence from venom glands of diverse species including snakes, spiders, cone snails and centipedes indicates that gene duplication is the prevailing mechanism for evolving novel protein secretions (Casewell et al, 2011;Dowell et al, 2016;Ellsworth et al, 2019;Fry et al, 2009Fry et al, , 2006Wong and Belov, 2012). Further support comes from spider silk glands, where largescale duplication of spidroin genes, which encode primary silk proteins, enabled evolution of specialized silk types with different material properties (Clarke et al, 2015;Vienneau-Hathaway et al, 2017). Counter to this trend, almost half the venom proteins in Nasonia wasps are single-copy genes with normal roles in wasp physiology that have been co-opted into the venom gland (Martinson et al, 2017).…”