Background: Fungus farming is an unusual life style in insects that has evolved many times in the wood boring weevils named ‘ambrosia beetles’. Multiple occurrences of this behaviour allow for a detailed comparison of the different origins of fungus farming through time, its directionality, and possible ancestral states. We tested these hypotheses with a phylogeny representing the largest data set to date, nearly 4 kb of nucleotides from COI, EF-1α, CAD, ArgK, 28S, and 200 scolytine taxa. Results: Phylogenetic analyses using Bayesian or parsimony approaches placed the root of Scolytinae close to the tribe Scolytini and Microborus, but otherwise indicated low resolution at older nodes. More recent clades were well resolved, including ten ori...
The invention of agriculture is a revolutionary moment in the history of humankind that allowed a tr...
Fungus-farming is known from attine ants, macrotermites, and ambrosia beetles (Scolytinae, Platypodi...
Insect fungus gardens consist of a community of interacting microorganisms that can have either bene...
Insect–fungus mutualism is one of the better-studied symbiotic interactions in nature. Ambrosia fung...
Bark and ambrosia beetles are highly specialized weevils (Curculionidae) that have established diver...
Bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae, Scolytinae) display a conspicuous diversity of unusual gen...
Bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae, Scolytinae) display a conspicuous diversity of unusual gen...
Globally distributed bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae) form diverse symbioses with fungi, pr...
Ambrosia beetles farm ascomycetous fungi in tunnels within wood. These ambrosia fungi are regarded a...
Thousands of species of ambrosia beetles excavate tunnels in wood to farm fungi. They maintain assoc...
Ambrosia beetle fungiculture represents one of the most ecologically and evolutionarily successful s...
Fungus cultivation by ambrosia beetles is one of the four independently evolved cases of agriculture...
Ambrosia beetles farm specialised fungi in sapwood tunnels and use pocket-like organs called mycangi...
No organism evolves in isolation; the symbiotic microorganisms associated with insects are key dete...
The bacterial and fungal community involved in ambrosia beetle fungiculture remains poorly studied c...
The invention of agriculture is a revolutionary moment in the history of humankind that allowed a tr...
Fungus-farming is known from attine ants, macrotermites, and ambrosia beetles (Scolytinae, Platypodi...
Insect fungus gardens consist of a community of interacting microorganisms that can have either bene...
Insect–fungus mutualism is one of the better-studied symbiotic interactions in nature. Ambrosia fung...
Bark and ambrosia beetles are highly specialized weevils (Curculionidae) that have established diver...
Bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae, Scolytinae) display a conspicuous diversity of unusual gen...
Bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae, Scolytinae) display a conspicuous diversity of unusual gen...
Globally distributed bark and ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae) form diverse symbioses with fungi, pr...
Ambrosia beetles farm ascomycetous fungi in tunnels within wood. These ambrosia fungi are regarded a...
Thousands of species of ambrosia beetles excavate tunnels in wood to farm fungi. They maintain assoc...
Ambrosia beetle fungiculture represents one of the most ecologically and evolutionarily successful s...
Fungus cultivation by ambrosia beetles is one of the four independently evolved cases of agriculture...
Ambrosia beetles farm specialised fungi in sapwood tunnels and use pocket-like organs called mycangi...
No organism evolves in isolation; the symbiotic microorganisms associated with insects are key dete...
The bacterial and fungal community involved in ambrosia beetle fungiculture remains poorly studied c...
The invention of agriculture is a revolutionary moment in the history of humankind that allowed a tr...
Fungus-farming is known from attine ants, macrotermites, and ambrosia beetles (Scolytinae, Platypodi...
Insect fungus gardens consist of a community of interacting microorganisms that can have either bene...