ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: PHYLOGENETIC EXPLORATION OF MATING SYSTEM EVOLUTION IN THE EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN LEIOBUNINE HARVESTMEN (OPILIONES: SCLEROSOMATIDAE)
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Title of Dissertation: PHYLOGENETIC EXPLORATION OF MATING SYSTEM EVOLUTION IN THE EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN LEIOBUNINE HARVESTMEN (OPILIONES: SCLEROSOMATIDAE) Mercedes M. Burns, Doctor of Philosophy, 2014 Directed By: Dr. Jeffrey W. Shultz, Associate Professor, Department of Entomology Understanding the basis for the vast diversity in reproductive structures found within the animal kingdom is a perennial issue in evolutionary biology. Meanwhile, taxonomists have long capitalized on the substantial genital diversity in the eastern North American leiobunine harvestmen for identifying and delimiting species, but no attempts have been made to explore the functional or evolutionary significance of this variety. Past discussion of the evolution of reproductive heterogeneity attributes genitalic diversification to female preferences, although recent work has also emphasized the (potentially competing) importance of intersexual conflict leading to sexually antagonistic coevolution. Here I test the overarching support for diversification of reproductive structures in leiobunine harvestmen via female choice and sexual conflict mechanisms of sexual selection. My dissertation work consisted of 1) reconstructing the phylogeny of eastern North American leiobunine harvestmen using molecular characters, 2) mapping and simulating relevant discrete morphological features, and 3), using biomechanical and kinetic reproductive data to test whether the direction of evolutionary change in reproductive characters within and between sexes is consistent with increasing sexual antagonism through evolutionary time via a comparative approach. I found support for the monophyly of the eastern North American leiobunine harvestmen, as well as evidence for an evolutionary transition from enticement-based mating to conflict-based systems. My novel uses of phylogenetic comparative methods to quantify mating systems demonstrate that leiobunine species form a continuum of reproductive diversity ranging from specialization in female enticement to precopulatory antagonistic contexts, with correlations between male and female discrete and continuous traits, suggesting long-term sexual coevolution has occurred. I conclude that mating system evolution has occurred in the leiobunine harvestmen, with sexual selection as its ultimate driver, and I offer hypotheses as to the origins of sexual conflict in these temperate lineages. PHYLOGENETIC EXPLORATION OF MATING SYSTEM EVOLUTION IN THE EASTERN NORTH AMERICAN LEIOBUNINE HARVESTMEN (OPILIONES: SCLEROSOMATIDAE)
منابع مشابه
Molecular phylogeny of the leiobunine harvestmen of eastern North America (Opiliones: Sclerosomatidae: Leiobuninae).
Phylogenetic relationships among the leiobunine harvestmen or "daddy-longlegs" of eastern North America (Leiobunum, Hadrobunus, Eumesosoma) are poorly known, and systematic knowledge of the group has been limited largely to species descriptions and proposed species groups. Here we obtained mitochondrial (NADH1, 16S and 12S rDNA) and nuclear (28S rDNA, EF-1α introns and exons) DNA sequences from...
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BACKGROUND Many cave-dwelling animal species display similar morphologies (troglomorphism) that have evolved convergent within and among lineages under the similar selective pressures imposed by cave habitats. Here we study such ecomorphological evolution in cave-dwelling Sclerobuninae harvestmen (Opiliones) from the western United States, providing general insights into morphological homoplasy...
متن کاملBiomechanical Diversity of Mating Structures among Harvestmen Species Is Consistent with a Spectrum of Precopulatory Strategies
Diversity in reproductive structures is frequently explained by selection acting at individual to generational timescales, but interspecific differences predicted by such models (e.g., female choice or sexual conflict) are often untestable in a phylogenetic framework. An alternative approach focuses on clade- or function-specific hypotheses that predict evolutionary patterns in terms neutral to...
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Explaining the rapid, species-specific diversification of reproductive structures and behaviors is a long-standing goal of evolutionary biology, with recent research tending to attribute reproductive phenotypes to the evolutionary mechanisms of female mate choice or intersexual conflict. Progress in understanding these and other possible mechanisms depends, in part, on reconstructing the direct...
متن کاملA Model for Phylogenetic Chemosystematics: Evolutionary History of Quinones in the Scent Gland Secretions of Harvestmen
By the possession of unique exocrine scent glands, Opiliones (harvestmen) arise as a perfect model for studies on the evolutionary history of secretion chemistry. Among gland compounds of harvestmen, it is the quinones that represent recurring elements across the secretions of all suborders. Reliable data on quinone-distribution, however, is only known for Laniatores (benzoquinones) and Cyphoph...
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تاریخ انتشار 2014