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Specialist insects are especially susceptible to loss of genetic diversity in the face of habitat destruction and fragmentation. Implementing effective conservation practices for specialist insects will benefit from knowledge of population structure and genetic diversity. Because insects are hyper-diverse, characterizing the population structure of all species within the insect community is untenable, even if focused within a particular habitat type. Thus, concentrating on a single species specialized to a particular habitat type is needed to infer general trends. Here, we investigate the range-wide population genetics of Tetraopes texanus Horn 1878 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), which provides a useful model of grassland insects due to its’ habitat specificity and unique biology. Tetraopes texanus occurs primarily in Texas and Oklahoma, into Northern Mexico, and possibly into eastern New Mexico but also occurs in Black Belt prairies of Mississippi and Alabama. Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA (RAD-seq) analysis identified two distinct population clusters of T. texanus corresponding to the Texas and Oklahoma population and the Mississippi and Alabama population. Demographic models indicate ongoing, though incomplete, isolation of the two populations, with estimated dates of divergence in the mid-Pleistocene, coinciding with the end of a glacial period and a shift in glacial interval. These results can inform conservation of grassland adapted insects and offers insight to the biogeography of the Gulf Coastal Plain.
Specialist insects are especially susceptible to loss of genetic diversity in the face of habitat destruction and fragmentation. Implementing effective conservation practices for specialist insects will benefit from knowledge of population structure and genetic diversity. Because insects are hyper-diverse, characterizing the population structure of all species within the insect community is untenable, even if focused within a particular habitat type. Thus, concentrating on a single species specialized to a particular habitat type is needed to infer general trends. Here, we investigate the range-wide population genetics of Tetraopes texanus Horn 1878 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), which provides a useful model of grassland insects due to its’ habitat specificity and unique biology. Tetraopes texanus occurs primarily in Texas and Oklahoma, into Northern Mexico, and possibly into eastern New Mexico but also occurs in Black Belt prairies of Mississippi and Alabama. Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA (RAD-seq) analysis identified two distinct population clusters of T. texanus corresponding to the Texas and Oklahoma population and the Mississippi and Alabama population. Demographic models indicate ongoing, though incomplete, isolation of the two populations, with estimated dates of divergence in the mid-Pleistocene, coinciding with the end of a glacial period and a shift in glacial interval. These results can inform conservation of grassland adapted insects and offers insight to the biogeography of the Gulf Coastal Plain.
Pisauridae Simon, 1890 or “nursery web spiders” are a global and heterogenous assemblage of spider genera with diverse lifestyles, containing web builders and webless species, as well as terrestrial and semi-aquatic species, notably “fishing spiders”, genusDolomedesLatreille, 1804. Incomplete, unresolved, or conflicting phylogenies have so far hampered testing forDolomedesand pisaurid monophyly and evolution. Here, we broadly address these questions within a phylogenomic and comparative framework. Our goals are i) reconstruction of a robust phylogeny to test the monophyly ofDolomedesand Pisauridae and to amendDolomedesclassification; ii) estimation of evolutionary shifts and trends in lifestyles and capture webs; and iii) evaluation of hypotheses of morphological trait association with a semi-aquatic lifestyle. To this end we generate subgenomic data (ultraconserved elements or UCE) for 53Dolomedesspecies and 28 pisaurid genera. We analyze these data using maximum likelihood, Bayesian, and multi-species coalescence approaches, as well as using two different phylogenetic time calibration methods, RelTime and MCMCtree. Consistent across analytical approaches, our phylogenies reject the monophyly of both Pisauridae andDolomedes. “Pisaurid” genera fall into three clades: 1) Focal Clade I groups the majority, includingPisauraSimon, 1886, hence representing true pisaurids; 2) Focal Clade II =BlandiniaTonini et al., 2016 is sister to Trechaleidae Simon, 1890 and Lycosidae Sundevall, 1833; 3) Focal Clade III with fishing and raft spiders groupsDolomedes,MegadolomedesDavies and Raven, 1980, andOrnodolomedesRaven and Hebron, 2018 and is sister to Focal Clade II, Trechaleidae, and Lycosidae. Our taxonomy, based on complementary taxa and morphological evidence, resurrects Dolomedidae Simon, 1876 to includeDolomedesand the Oceanic generaBradystichusSimon, 1884,Megadolomedes,CaledomedesRaven and Hebron, 2018,MangromedesRaven and Hebron, 2018,Ornodolomedes, andTasmomedesRaven and Hebron, 2018. Both RelTime and MCMCtree analyses yield comparable divergence estimations: Pisauridae origin is estimated between 29 and 40 Ma;Blandiniabetween 21 and 34 Ma; Dolomedidae between 10 and 17 Ma; andDolomedesbetween 9 and 16 Ma. In order to avoid misleading significant correlations and/or over-resolved ancestral states, we performed taxon sampling bias correction in all evolutionary analyses. Evolutionary analyses reconstruct semi-aquatic lifestyle as ancestral to a large clade containing pisaurids, lycosids, trechaleids,Blandinia, and dolomedids, with several reversals to terrestrial lifestyle. Capture webs evolved at least three times, with reversals. Counter to expectation, the evolution of lifestyles and capture webs are independent. Although leg and tarsus lengths do not indicate lifestyles, semi-aquatic taxa are significantly larger than terrestrial ones. We explain this pattern with a biomechanical threshold over which surface tension can be broken while spiders forage under water. Our time-calibrated analyses indicate that the evolution of terrestrial and web-building lifestyles from semi-aquatic ancestors in Pisauridae coincided with cooling and drying climates in the mid-Miocene. We therefore hypothesize that climatic changes have acted as strong selection pressures toward lifestyle diversification.
Coniferous forests are under severe threat of the rapid anthropogenic climate warming. Abies (firs), the fourth‐largest conifer genus, is a keystone component of the boreal and temperate dark‐coniferous forests and harbors a remarkably large number of relict taxa. However, the uncertainty of the phylogenetic and biogeographic history of Abies significantly impedes our prediction of future dynamics and efficient conservation of firs. In this study, using 1,533 nuclear genes generated from transcriptome sequencing and a complete sampling of all widely recognized species, we have successfully reconstructed a robust phylogeny of global firs, in which four clades are strongly supported and all intersectional relationships are resolved, although phylogenetic discordance caused mainly by incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization was detected. Molecular dating and ancestral area reconstruction suggest a Northern Hemisphere high‐latitude origin of Abies during the Late Cretaceous, but all extant firs diversified during the Miocene to the Pleistocene, and multiple continental and intercontinental dispersals took place in response to the late Neogene climate cooling and orogenic movements. Notably, four critically endangered firs endemic to subtropical mountains of China, including A. beshanzuensis, A. ziyuanensis, A. fanjingshanensis and A. yuanbaoshanensis from east to west, have different origins and evolutionary histories. Moreover, three hotspots of species richness, including western North America, central Japan, and the Hengduan Mountains, were identified in Abies. Elevation and precipitation, particularly precipitation of the coldest quarter, are the most significant environmental factors driving the global distribution pattern of fir species diversity. Some morphological traits are evolutionarily constrained, and those linked to elevational variation (e.g., purple cone) and cold resistance (e.g., pubescent branch and resinous bud) may have contributed to the diversification of global firs. Our study sheds new light on the spatiotemporal evolution of global firs, which will be of great help to forest management and species conservation in a warming world.
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