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1.
Zootaxa ; 5353(6): 595-600, 2023 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38220660

RESUMO

The Afrotropical genus Cryphalomimus Eggers, 1927 is revised. New distributional records are added, showing a broad but scattered distribution of C. striatus Eggers, 1927. Internal morphological characters for this genus are described here for the first time. An illustrated identification key for the three included species is provided.


Assuntos
Besouros , Gorgulhos , Animais , Casca de Planta
2.
Persoonia ; 44: 41-66, 2020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33116335

RESUMO

Ambrosia beetles farm specialised fungi in sapwood tunnels and use pocket-like organs called mycangia to carry propagules of the fungal cultivars. Ambrosia fungi selectively grow in mycangia, which is central to the symbiosis, but the history of coevolution between fungal cultivars and mycangia is poorly understood. The fungal family Ceratocystidaceae previously included three ambrosial genera (Ambrosiella, Meredithiella, and Phialophoropsis), each farmed by one of three distantly related tribes of ambrosia beetles with unique and relatively large mycangium types. Studies on the phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary histories of these three genera were expanded with the previously unstudied ambrosia fungi associated with a fourth mycangium type, that of the tribe Scolytoplatypodini. Using ITS rDNA barcoding and a concatenated dataset of six loci (28S rDNA, 18S rDNA, tef1-α, tub, mcm7, and rpl1), a comprehensive phylogeny of the family Ceratocystidaceae was developed, including Inodoromyces interjectus gen. & sp. nov., a non-ambrosial species that is closely related to the family. Three minor morphological variants of the pronotal disk mycangium of the Scolytoplatypodini were associated with ambrosia fungi in three respective clades of Ceratocystidaceae: Wolfgangiella gen. nov., Toshionella gen. nov., and Ambrosiella remansi sp. nov. Closely-related species that are not symbionts of ambrosia beetles are accommodated by Catunica adiposa gen. & comb. nov. and Solaloca norvegica gen. & comb. nov. The divergent morphology of the ambrosial genera and their phylogenetic placement among non-ambrosial genera suggest three domestication events in the Ceratocystidaceae. Estimated divergence dates for the ambrosia fungi and mycangia suggest that Scolytoplatypodini mycangia may have been the first to acquire Ceratocystidaceae symbionts and other ambrosial fungal genera emerged shortly after the evolution of new mycangium types. There is no evidence of reversion to a non-ambrosial lifestyle in the mycangial symbionts.

3.
Bull Entomol Res ; 93(5): 455-66, 2003 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14658448

RESUMO

Insect seed predators of 24 dipterocarp species (including the genera ot Dipterocarpus, Dryobalanops and Shorea) and five species belonging to the Moraceae, Myrtaceae, Celastraceae and Sapotaceae were investigated. In a tropical lowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia, these trees produces seeds irregularly by intensely during general flowering and seeding events in 1996 and/or 1998. Dipterocarp seeds were preyed on by 51 insect species (11 families), which were roughly classified into three taxonomic groups: smaller moths (Trotricidae, Pyralidae, Crambidae, Immidae, Sesiidae, and Cosmopterigidae), scolytids (Scolydae) and weevils (Curdulionidae, Apionidae, Anthribidae, and Attelabidae). Although the host-specificity of invertebrate seed predators has been assumed to be high in tropical forests, it was found that the diet ranges of some insect predators were relatively wide and overlapped one another. Most seed predators that were collected in both study years changes their diets between general flowering and seeding events. The results of cluster analyses based on the number of adult of each predator species that emerged from 100 seeds of each tree species, suggested that the dominant species was not consistent, alternating between the two years.


Assuntos
Ericales/parasitologia , Insetos/fisiologia , Sementes/parasitologia , Árvores/parasitologia , Animais , Bornéu , Análise por Conglomerados , Ericales/fisiologia , Feminino , Insetos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Masculino , Densidade Demográfica , Dinâmica Populacional , Sementes/fisiologia , Especificidade da Espécie , Árvores/fisiologia , Clima Tropical
4.
Insect Mol Biol ; 11(5): 453-65, 2002 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12230544

RESUMO

Elongation Factor 1-alpha was used to test the monophyly of the wood boring beetle tribe Xyleborini, where all species are haplodiploid and perform regular inbreeding by brother-sister mating. Due to their feeding requirements, being highly dependent on ophiostomatoid fungi which they cultivate in wood tunnels, monophyly may be expected due to nutritional constraints. During the course of analyses, two copies of EF-1alpha were amplified in these beetles, differing in intron structure. The high similarity between paralogous amino acid sequences (93-94%) indicates a rather recent duplication in beetles, but phylogenetic analyses of different copies in insects rejected this hypothesis. Subsequent phylogenetic analyses of eighty orthologous sequences from Xyleborini and allied taxa, using the single-intron bearing copy, were greatly improved in resolution and node support by including the intron sequences (c. 60 bp). Most analyses resulted in a monophyletic Xyleborini, implying one origin of fungus feeding in this tribe. However, clear evidence for a polyphyletic Xyleborus and three more xyleborine genera calls for further revision of xyleborine classification.


Assuntos
Besouros/genética , Haploidia , Fator 1 de Elongação de Peptídeos/genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Besouros/classificação , DNA Complementar , Evolução Molecular , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia
5.
Evolution ; 55(10): 2011-27, 2001 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11761062

RESUMO

Beetles in the weevil subfamilies Scolytinae and Platypodinae are unusual in that they burrow as adults inside trees for feeding and oviposition. Some of these beetles are known as ambrosia beetles for their obligate mutualisms with asexual fungi--known as ambrosia fungi--that are derived from plant pathogens in the ascomycete group known as the ophiostomatoid fungi. Other beetles in these subfamilies are known as bark beetles and are associated with free-living, pathogenic ophiostomatoid fungi that facilitate beetle attack of phloem of trees with resin defenses. Using DNA sequences from six genes, including both copies of the nuclear gene encoding enolase, we performed a molecular phylogenetic study of bark and ambrosia beetles across these two subfamilies to establish the rate and direction of changes in life histories and their consequences for diversification. The ambrosia beetle habits have evolved repeatedly and are unreversed. The subfamily Platypodinae is derived from within the Scolytinae, near the tribe Scolytini. Comparison of the molecular branch lengths of ambrosia beetles and ambrosia fungi reveals a strong correlation, which a fungal molecular clock suggests spans 60 to 21 million years. Bark beetles have shifted from ancestral association with conifers to angiosperms and back again several times. Each shift to angiosperms is associated with elevated diversity, whereas the reverse shifts to conifers are associated with lowered diversity. The unusual habit of adult burrowing likely facilitated the diversification of these beetle-fungus associations, enabling them to use the biomass-rich resource that trees represent and set the stage for at least one origin of eusociality.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Besouros/classificação , Besouros/genética , Cycadopsida/parasitologia , Variação Genética , Magnoliopsida/parasitologia , Filogenia , Agricultura , Animais , Ascomicetos/fisiologia , Besouros/microbiologia , Besouros/fisiologia , Diploide , Comportamento Alimentar , Haploidia , Proteínas de Insetos/genética , Oviposição , Fosfopiruvato Hidratase/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Especificidade da Espécie , Árvores/microbiologia , Árvores/parasitologia
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