A long-standing hypothesis asserts that plant-feeding insects specialize on particular host plants because of negative interactions (trade-offs) between adaptations to alternative hosts, yet empirical evidence for such trade-offs is scarce. Most studies have looked for microevolutionary performance trade-offs within insect species, but host use could also be constrained by macroevolutionary trade-offs caused by epistasis and historical contingency. Here we used a phylogenetic approach to estimate the micro- and macroevolutionary correlations between use of alternative host-plant taxa within two major orders of plant-feeding insects: Lepidoptera (caterpillars) and Hemiptera (true bugs). Across 1,604 caterpillar species, we found both positiv...
In this paper I examine how host use may have influenced the diversification of phytophagous insects...
Evolutionary biologists have often assumed that ecological generalism comes at the expense of less i...
Trade-offs have often been invoked to explain the evolution of ecological specialization. Phytophago...
A long-standing hypothesis asserts that plant-feeding insects specialize on particular host plants b...
A jack of all trades can be master of none – this intuitive idea underlies most theoretical models o...
The immense diversity of life on Earth has been attributed to the partitioning of available resource...
1. Insects tend to feed on related hosts. The phylogenetic composition of host plant communities thu...
We characterized evolutionary patterns of host plant use across about 2500 species of British Lepido...
Herbivorous insects represent one of the most successful animal radiations known. They occupy a wide...
Understanding the evolutionary dynamics underlying herbivorous insect mega-diversity requires invest...
One explanation for the widespread host specialization of insect herbivores is the "Jack of all trad...
In this paper I examine how host use may have influenced the diversification of phytophagous insects...
Evolutionary biologists have often assumed that ecological generalism comes at the expense of less i...
Trade-offs have often been invoked to explain the evolution of ecological specialization. Phytophago...
A long-standing hypothesis asserts that plant-feeding insects specialize on particular host plants b...
A jack of all trades can be master of none – this intuitive idea underlies most theoretical models o...
The immense diversity of life on Earth has been attributed to the partitioning of available resource...
1. Insects tend to feed on related hosts. The phylogenetic composition of host plant communities thu...
We characterized evolutionary patterns of host plant use across about 2500 species of British Lepido...
Herbivorous insects represent one of the most successful animal radiations known. They occupy a wide...
Understanding the evolutionary dynamics underlying herbivorous insect mega-diversity requires invest...
One explanation for the widespread host specialization of insect herbivores is the "Jack of all trad...
In this paper I examine how host use may have influenced the diversification of phytophagous insects...
Evolutionary biologists have often assumed that ecological generalism comes at the expense of less i...
Trade-offs have often been invoked to explain the evolution of ecological specialization. Phytophago...