Diversification of Carnivorous Parasitic Insects: Extraordinary Radiation or Specialized Dead End?
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Wiegmann, Brian M., Charles Mitter, Brian Farrell. "Diversification of Carnivorous Parasitic Insects: Extraordinary Radiation or Specialized Dead End?." The American Naturalist 142, no. 5 (1993): 737-754. DOI: 10.1086/285570Abstract
The spectacular diversity of insects has often been attributed to accelerated radiation of groups acquiring specialized trophic habits. In accord with this hypothesis, a previous study demonstrated consistently greater diversification in clades attacking higher plant\, as contrasted to their predaceous or saprophagous sister groups. Faster diversification of phytophagous insects could represent radiation in an unsaturated adaptive zone or result from the population fragmen- tation and diversifying selection imposed by ecological specialization per se. The latter effect underlies the hypothesis that rapid diversification characterizes "parasitic" insects in a broad sense including most phytophages, contrasting with the classical view of parasitic specialization as an evolutionary "dead end." To test these hypotheses, we catalogued the origins and effect on diversification of animal parasitism by insects. Of 15 carnivorous parasitic insect clades with estimated relationships, six were more diverse than their predaceo~~osr saprophagous sister groups, and nine less diverse (Wilcoxon T = 28, P < .LO).The parasitic lifestyle in the broad sense is by itself unlikely to be a dominant explanation of variable insect diversification rate, while the hypothesis that parasitism in the strict sense is an evolutionary dead end remains plausible. Carnivorous parasitism and phytophagy have significantly different effects on diversi- fication. We found no evidence for ascribing either this difference or the heterogeneity of rates among carnivorous parasitc cladcs to cladc agc, modc of parasitism, diversity of host clade, or host specificity. Greater diversification by phytophages than by other trophic levels might reflect simply greater average abundance of the resource used by primary consumers.Terms of Use
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