2013
DOI: 10.1111/mec.12459
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Biogeography and host‐related factors trump parasite life history: limited congruence among the genetic structures of specific ectoparasitic lice and their rodent hosts

Abstract: Parasites and hosts interact across both micro- and macroevolutionary scales where congruence among their phylogeographic and phylogenetic structures may be observed. Within southern Africa, the four-striped mouse genus, Rhabdomys, is parasitized by the ectoparasitic sucking louse, Polyplax arvicanthis. Molecular data recently suggested the presence of two cryptic species within P. arvicanthis that are sympatrically distributed across the distributions of four putative Rhabdomys species. We tested the hypothes… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…With asexual reproduction, the fungus and alga disperse together, and so, a predominance of asexual reproduction may be one of the reasons we see such a strong co-diversification signal in these taxa. However, the results of this study suggest that the spatial distributions of the fungi and algae may also be important in determining the nature of the symbiosis, particularly at larger spatial scales, as has been observed in some parasite lineages (e.g., du Toit et al, 2013). Thus, we need to do more work on algal and fungal availability to determine if habitat preferences and/or dispersal limitation led to some of the spatial patterns that we see.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…With asexual reproduction, the fungus and alga disperse together, and so, a predominance of asexual reproduction may be one of the reasons we see such a strong co-diversification signal in these taxa. However, the results of this study suggest that the spatial distributions of the fungi and algae may also be important in determining the nature of the symbiosis, particularly at larger spatial scales, as has been observed in some parasite lineages (e.g., du Toit et al, 2013). Thus, we need to do more work on algal and fungal availability to determine if habitat preferences and/or dispersal limitation led to some of the spatial patterns that we see.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Parasites often codiversify or coevolve with their hosts, and recently gene sequences and inferred tree topologies have been used to test these hypotheses of codiversification (Johnson et al 2004, Kuo et al 2008, Cruaud et al 2012, Rosenblueth et al 2012, Du Toit et al 2013. While event-based reconciliation tools show some codiversification of Pseudocollinia species with their host euphausiids, the AU/SH tests rejected absolute codiversification.…”
Section: Codiversification Of Pseudocollinia Species and Their Euphaumentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The individual Rhabdomys species, however, differ in their phylogeographic structure (genetic connectivity among geographic populations). For example, the solitary R. dilectus that occurs on the eastern area of southern Africa has haplotype sharing throughout the region (indicative of higher dispersal capabilities) while the arid adapted R. bechuanae has strong intraspecific population differentiation among sampling sites, indicative of lower dispersal among sampling sites [11]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%