Cospeciation of ants and plants

Cospeciation, in which both parties of an ecological interaction speciate in parallel with each other, has rarely been reported in biotic associations except the cases for host–parasite interaction. Many tropical plants house ants and thereby gain protection against herbivores. Although these ant–pl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological research 2001-12, Vol.16 (4), p.787-793
Hauptverfasser: Itino, Takao, Davies, Stuart J., Tada, Hideko, Hieda, Yoshihiro, Inoguchi, Mika, Itioka, Takao, Yamane, Seiki, Inoue, Tamiji
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container_end_page 793
container_issue 4
container_start_page 787
container_title Ecological research
container_volume 16
creator Itino, Takao
Davies, Stuart J.
Tada, Hideko
Hieda, Yoshihiro
Inoguchi, Mika
Itioka, Takao
Yamane, Seiki
Inoue, Tamiji
description Cospeciation, in which both parties of an ecological interaction speciate in parallel with each other, has rarely been reported in biotic associations except the cases for host–parasite interaction. Many tropical plants house ants and thereby gain protection against herbivores. Although these ant–plant symbioses have been regarded as classical cases of coevolved mutualism, no evidence of cospeciation has been documented. The Asian ant–plant association between Crematogaster ants and Macaranga plants is highly species specific and the molecular phylogeny of the ants parallels the plant phylogeny, reflecting history of cospeciation. Evidence is presented that this association has been maintained over the past seven million years. Phylogeographic patterns of 27 ants from two Macaranga species suggest that allopatric cospeciations are still in progress in Asian wet tropics.
doi_str_mv 10.1046/j.1440-1703.2001.00442.x
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects coevolution
Crematogaster
Evolution
Formicidae
Herbivores
Macaranga
molecular phylogeny
Mutualism
myrmecophyte
Parasites
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
Tropical environments
Tropical plants
title Cospeciation of ants and plants
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