Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?

<p><strong>1.</strong> Species of Drosophilidae are frequently used as model organisms, but their relationships with the environment, particularly in immature stages, remain poorly known.</p> <p><strong>2.</strong> This is the most comprehensive survey to d...

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Príomhchruthaitheoirí: Valadao, H, Proenca, CEB, Kuhlmann, MP, Harris, SA, Tidon, R
Formáid: Journal article
Teanga:English
Foilsithe / Cruthaithe: Wiley 2019
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author Valadao, H
Proenca, CEB
Kuhlmann, MP
Harris, SA
Tidon, R
author_facet Valadao, H
Proenca, CEB
Kuhlmann, MP
Harris, SA
Tidon, R
author_sort Valadao, H
collection OXFORD
description <p><strong>1.</strong> Species of Drosophilidae are frequently used as model organisms, but their relationships with the environment, particularly in immature stages, remain poorly known.</p> <p><strong>2.</strong> This is the most comprehensive survey to date of fruit‐breeding drosophilids and their hosts in the Neotropics. Drosophilid host‐utilisation patterns were analysed as to geographic origin (native versus exotic) and level of specialisation.</p> <p><strong>3.</strong> The 180 species of plants recorded as drosophilid hosts are distributed across the main Angiosperm lineages and fleshy‐fruited orders; plant families that hosted the greatest number of drosophilid species were Arecaceae, Moraceae, and Myrtaceae. The 100 nominal drosophilid species recorded breeding in fruits belong to just over one‐third of Neotropical genera; most species (91) belong to Drosophila . Drosophilid species with the greatest resource breadth were Drosophila simulans , Drosophila nebulosa , and Zaprionus indianus.</p> <p><strong>4.</strong> Exotic drosophilids breed in more plant species than Neotropical drosophilids and use exotic hosts more frequently, possibly because they are generalists that have survived the trial of introduction and establishment in the Neotropics. Native drosophilids are more variable in resource breadth and sometimes adopt exotic hosts.</p> <p><strong>5.</strong> Amongst the 49 drosophilids with enough records for analysis (> 4), 48 were categorised as generalists. One possible explanation for such overwhelming generalism is the high diversity of Neotropical habitat or hosts. A second, non‐exclusive explanation, suggested by recent studies and empirically supported by the absence of host specialisation found in this study, is that drosophilids could be selective of the dominant yeasts and bacteria in host tissue, and not of the hosts themselves.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:4de32797-7622-4d38-838a-ceb28acf59092022-03-26T15:58:05ZFruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4de32797-7622-4d38-838a-ceb28acf5909EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2019Valadao, HProenca, CEBKuhlmann, MPHarris, SATidon, R<p><strong>1.</strong> Species of Drosophilidae are frequently used as model organisms, but their relationships with the environment, particularly in immature stages, remain poorly known.</p> <p><strong>2.</strong> This is the most comprehensive survey to date of fruit‐breeding drosophilids and their hosts in the Neotropics. Drosophilid host‐utilisation patterns were analysed as to geographic origin (native versus exotic) and level of specialisation.</p> <p><strong>3.</strong> The 180 species of plants recorded as drosophilid hosts are distributed across the main Angiosperm lineages and fleshy‐fruited orders; plant families that hosted the greatest number of drosophilid species were Arecaceae, Moraceae, and Myrtaceae. The 100 nominal drosophilid species recorded breeding in fruits belong to just over one‐third of Neotropical genera; most species (91) belong to Drosophila . Drosophilid species with the greatest resource breadth were Drosophila simulans , Drosophila nebulosa , and Zaprionus indianus.</p> <p><strong>4.</strong> Exotic drosophilids breed in more plant species than Neotropical drosophilids and use exotic hosts more frequently, possibly because they are generalists that have survived the trial of introduction and establishment in the Neotropics. Native drosophilids are more variable in resource breadth and sometimes adopt exotic hosts.</p> <p><strong>5.</strong> Amongst the 49 drosophilids with enough records for analysis (> 4), 48 were categorised as generalists. One possible explanation for such overwhelming generalism is the high diversity of Neotropical habitat or hosts. A second, non‐exclusive explanation, suggested by recent studies and empirically supported by the absence of host specialisation found in this study, is that drosophilids could be selective of the dominant yeasts and bacteria in host tissue, and not of the hosts themselves.</p>
spellingShingle Valadao, H
Proenca, CEB
Kuhlmann, MP
Harris, SA
Tidon, R
Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title_full Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title_fullStr Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title_full_unstemmed Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title_short Fruit‐breeding drosophilids (Diptera) in the Neotropics: playing the field and specialising in generalism?
title_sort fruit breeding drosophilids diptera in the neotropics playing the field and specialising in generalism
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AT kuhlmannmp fruitbreedingdrosophilidsdipteraintheneotropicsplayingthefieldandspecialisingingeneralism
AT harrissa fruitbreedingdrosophilidsdipteraintheneotropicsplayingthefieldandspecialisingingeneralism
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