2022
DOI: 10.1002/evl3.302
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Decoupling of sexual signals and their underlying morphology facilitates rapid phenotypic diversification

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Across the continental US, O. ochracea are known to parasitize at least 17 host species (Gray et al, 2019), and are found to be behaviorally specialized in parasitizing one or a few species within a geographic location (Gray et al, 2007). In Hawaii, where the preferred host cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus continue to evolve in response to selection imposed by O. ochracea, some crickets have lost the ability to produce calling songs (Rayner et al, 2019;Zuk et al, 2006), while others have been rapidly evolving more cryptic calling songs with frequency content that differs from ancestral Teleogryllus oceanicus calling songs (Broder et al, 2022;Gallagher et al, 2022;Tinghitella et al, 2021Tinghitella et al, , 2018. These changes to cricket calling songs may have led to the switching to alternative host species (Broder et al, 2023).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across the continental US, O. ochracea are known to parasitize at least 17 host species (Gray et al, 2019), and are found to be behaviorally specialized in parasitizing one or a few species within a geographic location (Gray et al, 2007). In Hawaii, where the preferred host cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus continue to evolve in response to selection imposed by O. ochracea, some crickets have lost the ability to produce calling songs (Rayner et al, 2019;Zuk et al, 2006), while others have been rapidly evolving more cryptic calling songs with frequency content that differs from ancestral Teleogryllus oceanicus calling songs (Broder et al, 2022;Gallagher et al, 2022;Tinghitella et al, 2021Tinghitella et al, , 2018. These changes to cricket calling songs may have led to the switching to alternative host species (Broder et al, 2023).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, both the presence of eco-evolutionary cycles (and the maintenance of polymorphism in the discrete model) show that heightened predation risk could explain sustained variation in sexual displays despite persistent female choice (i.e., the lek paradox). As a possible example, parasitoids have been shown to have induced variation in the sexual displays of Pacific field crickets ( Teleogryllus oceanicus ) [ 109 ]. Third, and relatedly, cycles in sexual displays have the potential to mislead empirical studies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%