2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.11.022
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Phylogenetic and ecological relationships of the Hawaiian Drosophila inferred by mitochondrial DNA analysis

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Cited by 66 publications
(103 citation statements)
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“…Strong evidence for speciation having occurred within an island or archipelago is provided by the monophyly of species endemic to that region. Accordingly, for example, it appears that 150 species of diving beetle are the product of a single colonisation event followed by speciation within the island of New Guinea (Balke et al 2007), and 1000 species of picture-winged Drosophila are the product of speciation within the Hawaiian archipelago (O'Grady et al 2011). Islands have illustrated that the factors that interact to provide conditions necessary for in situ speciation include isolation (Manceau et al 2010), age (Gillespie & Baldwin 2010) and area (Losos & Schluter 2000;Kisel & Barraclough 2010) of the region concerned, and variables often associated with area, such as topographic complexity and elevation (Whittaker et al 2008).…”
Section: Evolution Can Play a Key Role In Community Assemblymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Strong evidence for speciation having occurred within an island or archipelago is provided by the monophyly of species endemic to that region. Accordingly, for example, it appears that 150 species of diving beetle are the product of a single colonisation event followed by speciation within the island of New Guinea (Balke et al 2007), and 1000 species of picture-winged Drosophila are the product of speciation within the Hawaiian archipelago (O'Grady et al 2011). Islands have illustrated that the factors that interact to provide conditions necessary for in situ speciation include isolation (Manceau et al 2010), age (Gillespie & Baldwin 2010) and area (Losos & Schluter 2000;Kisel & Barraclough 2010) of the region concerned, and variables often associated with area, such as topographic complexity and elevation (Whittaker et al 2008).…”
Section: Evolution Can Play a Key Role In Community Assemblymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, some such radiations also contain sympatric or closely occurring sister species endemic to the same island (e.g. Hawaiian Tetragnatha and Drosophila: Gillespie & Baldwin 2010;O'Grady et al 2011). These have high potential to have diverged in the presence of intermittent or ongoing gene flow.…”
Section: Geography Gene Flow and Species Diversificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Hawaiian Drosophilidae as a whole have been the target of a number of studies (e.g. O' Grady and DeSalle, 2008;O'Grady et al, 2011;Thomas and Hunt, 1993;Throckmorton, 1966), but only one (Kambysellis et al, 1995) has specifically focused on the picture wing clade in its entirety. The latter is useful as a general outline, but suffers from weak sampling within the large grimshawi group, absence of any nudidrosophila species, and few outgroup taxa.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here we analyze the differential gene expression and allelespecific expression (ASE) of testis-level fertility in BC males between two closely related endemic Hawaiian Drosophila species in the picture-wing clade under planitibia group and IVβ subgroup, Drosophila planitibia and Drosophila silvestris (Spieth, 1986). D. silvestris is endemic to Hawai'i Island and D. planitibia is endemic to the island of Maui, and diverged ∼ 0.7 Mya (O'Grady et al, 2011;Magnacca and Price, 2015). Both species are bark breeders, whereby females oviposit eggs on and larvae develop in the decaying bark of the endemic Hawaiian flowering plant, Clermontia spp.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%