International audiencePhytophagous insects provide useful models for the study of ecological speciation. Much attention has been paid to host shifts, whereas situations where closely related lineages of insects use the same plant during different time periods have been relatively neglected in previous studies of insect diversification. Flies of the genus Strobilomyia are major pests of conifers in Eurasia and North America. They are specialized feeders in cones and seeds of Abies (fir), Larix (larch) and Picea (spruce). This close association is accompanied by a large number of sympatric Strobilomyia species coexisting within each tree genus. We constructed a molecular phylogeny with a 1320 base-pair fragment of mitochondrial DNA that demon...
How do asexual taxa become adapted to a diversity of environments, and how do they persist despite c...
The family Tachinidae (“bristle flies”) is the most diverse and ecologically important group of inse...
<div><p>Genetic divergence and speciation in plant-feeding insects could be driven by contrasting se...
International audiencePhytophagous insects provide useful models for the study of ecological speciat...
Understanding how diversification proceeds during adaptive radiation requires studies of diversity a...
International audienceThe genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic ...
The pine-needle scale insects; Chionaspis pinifoliae and C. heterophyllae are armored scale insects ...
The pine-needle scale insects; Chionaspis pinifoliae and C. heterophyllae are armored scale insects ...
Comparative analyses of populations at different stages of divergence can yield insights into the pr...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Gall-forming insects provide ideal systems to analyze the evolution of host–parasite interactions an...
Elucidating the mechanisms and conditions facilitating the formation of biodiversity are central top...
Studies of related populations varying in their degrees of reproductive isolation can provide insigh...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Leaf-mining flies (Diptera: Agromyzidae) are a diverse clade of phytophagous Diptera known largely f...
How do asexual taxa become adapted to a diversity of environments, and how do they persist despite c...
The family Tachinidae (“bristle flies”) is the most diverse and ecologically important group of inse...
<div><p>Genetic divergence and speciation in plant-feeding insects could be driven by contrasting se...
International audiencePhytophagous insects provide useful models for the study of ecological speciat...
Understanding how diversification proceeds during adaptive radiation requires studies of diversity a...
International audienceThe genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic ...
The pine-needle scale insects; Chionaspis pinifoliae and C. heterophyllae are armored scale insects ...
The pine-needle scale insects; Chionaspis pinifoliae and C. heterophyllae are armored scale insects ...
Comparative analyses of populations at different stages of divergence can yield insights into the pr...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Gall-forming insects provide ideal systems to analyze the evolution of host–parasite interactions an...
Elucidating the mechanisms and conditions facilitating the formation of biodiversity are central top...
Studies of related populations varying in their degrees of reproductive isolation can provide insigh...
The genus Stomoxys Geoffroy (Diptera; Muscidae) contains species of parasitic flies that are of medi...
Leaf-mining flies (Diptera: Agromyzidae) are a diverse clade of phytophagous Diptera known largely f...
How do asexual taxa become adapted to a diversity of environments, and how do they persist despite c...
The family Tachinidae (“bristle flies”) is the most diverse and ecologically important group of inse...
<div><p>Genetic divergence and speciation in plant-feeding insects could be driven by contrasting se...