To study interactions between host figs and their pollinating wasps and the influence of climatic change on their genetic structures, we sequenced cytoplasmic and nuclear genes and genotyped nuclear microsatellite loci from two varieties of Ficus pumila, the widespread creeping fig and endemic jelly fig, and from their pollinating wasps, Wiebesia pumilae, found in Taiwan and on nearby offshore islands. Great divergence in the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (mtCOI) with no genetic admixture in nuclear markers indicated that creeping- and jelly-fig wasps are genetically distinct. Compared with creeping-fig wasps, jelly-fig wasps also showed better resistance under cold (20 °C) than warm (25 and 30 °C) conditions in a survival te...
Studies investigating the evolution of flowering plants have long focused on isolating mechanisms su...
The extent of isolation among closely related sympatric plant species engaged in obligate pollinatio...
Molecular techniques are revealing increasing numbers of morphologically similar but co-existing cry...
To study interactions between host figs and their pollinating wasps and the influence of climatic ch...
Figs and their pollinating fig wasps constitute a classic example of co-evolution. Recent molecular ...
The obligate mutualism of figs and fig-pollinating wasps has been one of the classic models used for...
The transfer of genes between populations is increasingly important in a world where pollinators are...
The genus Ficus (Moraceae) is best known for its obligate mutualism with pollinating fig-wasps (Agao...
Interacting species of pollinator–host systems, especially the obligate ones, are sensitive to habit...
Hybridization and insect pollination are widely believed to increase rates of plant diversification....
The ways that plant-feeding insects have diversified is central to our understanding of terrestrial ...
It is thought that speciation in phytophagous insects is often due to colonization of novel host pla...
The obligate mutualism between pollinating fig wasps in the family Agaonidae (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoi...
Studies investigating the evolution of flowering plants have long focused on isolating mechanisms su...
The extent of isolation among closely related sympatric plant species engaged in obligate pollinatio...
Molecular techniques are revealing increasing numbers of morphologically similar but co-existing cry...
To study interactions between host figs and their pollinating wasps and the influence of climatic ch...
Figs and their pollinating fig wasps constitute a classic example of co-evolution. Recent molecular ...
The obligate mutualism of figs and fig-pollinating wasps has been one of the classic models used for...
The transfer of genes between populations is increasingly important in a world where pollinators are...
The genus Ficus (Moraceae) is best known for its obligate mutualism with pollinating fig-wasps (Agao...
Interacting species of pollinator–host systems, especially the obligate ones, are sensitive to habit...
Hybridization and insect pollination are widely believed to increase rates of plant diversification....
The ways that plant-feeding insects have diversified is central to our understanding of terrestrial ...
It is thought that speciation in phytophagous insects is often due to colonization of novel host pla...
The obligate mutualism between pollinating fig wasps in the family Agaonidae (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoi...
Studies investigating the evolution of flowering plants have long focused on isolating mechanisms su...
The extent of isolation among closely related sympatric plant species engaged in obligate pollinatio...
Molecular techniques are revealing increasing numbers of morphologically similar but co-existing cry...