Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)

Callandrena, a subgenus of 80 described species of bees in the genus Andrena (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) is shown, via phylogenetic analysis of both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data, to be polyphyletic. The characters previously uniting this group have likely arisen by convergent evolution...

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Main Author: Larkin, Leah laPerle
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/29824
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-298242015-09-20T17:31:37ZPhylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)Larkin, Leah laPerlePhylogenyFloral host relationshipsCallandrenaHymenopteraAndrenidaeAndrenaCallandrena, a subgenus of 80 described species of bees in the genus Andrena (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) is shown, via phylogenetic analysis of both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data, to be polyphyletic. The characters previously uniting this group have likely arisen by convergent evolution among unrelated lineages that have independently specialized on flowers of the Asteraceae for pollen consumption. At this time, we cannot definitively state whether there are two or three clades of bees formerly ascribed to Callandrena, nor whether one clade may belong to the European subgenus Chrysandrena as has been proposed, so we do not erect a new subgenus of Andrena at this time. The limits of Callandrena sensu stricto are provisionally delimited based on a single morphological character. The phylogenetic relationships of the two groups relative to other Andrena subgenera are discussed in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3, Clade B, as defined for Callandrena in Chapter 2, is used to investigate the evolution of pollen host choice. Diet breadth is determined by analysis of pollen loads of at least 20 individual females per species. The choice of host and degree of specificity are then mapped onto the molecular phylogeny to investigate the evolution of these traits. Oligolecty appears to be the ancestral state in Andrena; polylecty has evolved several times; and reversals to oligolecty within these lineages have also occurred. Within the oligolectic lineage studied, host shifts were not uncommon. During the course of this study, a number of undescribed species were collected. Five are described in Chapter 4.text2015-05-13T17:17:16Z2015-05-13T17:17:16Z2002-052015-05-13Thesiselectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/29824engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.Restricted
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Phylogeny
Floral host relationships
Callandrena
Hymenoptera
Andrenidae
Andrena
spellingShingle Phylogeny
Floral host relationships
Callandrena
Hymenoptera
Andrenidae
Andrena
Larkin, Leah laPerle
Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
description Callandrena, a subgenus of 80 described species of bees in the genus Andrena (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) is shown, via phylogenetic analysis of both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data, to be polyphyletic. The characters previously uniting this group have likely arisen by convergent evolution among unrelated lineages that have independently specialized on flowers of the Asteraceae for pollen consumption. At this time, we cannot definitively state whether there are two or three clades of bees formerly ascribed to Callandrena, nor whether one clade may belong to the European subgenus Chrysandrena as has been proposed, so we do not erect a new subgenus of Andrena at this time. The limits of Callandrena sensu stricto are provisionally delimited based on a single morphological character. The phylogenetic relationships of the two groups relative to other Andrena subgenera are discussed in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3, Clade B, as defined for Callandrena in Chapter 2, is used to investigate the evolution of pollen host choice. Diet breadth is determined by analysis of pollen loads of at least 20 individual females per species. The choice of host and degree of specificity are then mapped onto the molecular phylogeny to investigate the evolution of these traits. Oligolecty appears to be the ancestral state in Andrena; polylecty has evolved several times; and reversals to oligolecty within these lineages have also occurred. Within the oligolectic lineage studied, host shifts were not uncommon. During the course of this study, a number of undescribed species were collected. Five are described in Chapter 4. === text
author Larkin, Leah laPerle
author_facet Larkin, Leah laPerle
author_sort Larkin, Leah laPerle
title Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
title_short Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
title_full Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
title_fullStr Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeny and floral host relationships of Callandrena (Hymenoptera : Andrenidae : Andrena)
title_sort phylogeny and floral host relationships of callandrena (hymenoptera : andrenidae : andrena)
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/29824
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