2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.01.027
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Evolutionary History of the Hymenoptera

Abstract: Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, ants, and bees) are one of four mega-diverse insect orders, comprising more than 153,000 described and possibly up to one million undescribed extant species [1, 2]. As parasitoids, predators, and pollinators, Hymenoptera play a fundamental role in virtually all terrestrial ecosystems and are of substantial economic importance [1, 3]. To understand the diversification and key evolutionary transitions of Hymenoptera, most notably from phytophagy to parasitoidism and predation (and v… Show more

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Cited by 627 publications
(675 citation statements)
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“…The valves can slide along each other (5, 7) and do not get dislocated under natural conditions, because they are longitudinally connected via a tongue-and-groove mechanism (5,(8)(9)(10). The ovipositor and the "wasp waist," a constriction of the body between the first and second abdominal segment (11), are essential in probing behavior and are therefore considered to be instrumental in the evolution of the order (11)(12)(13)(14)(15). The shape, structure, and mechanical properties of the ovipositors are putatively adapted to the substrates into which the animals need to probe (6,(16)(17)(18), and because both substrates and hosts are so diverse, this might have resulted in high species diversification of the hymenopterans (13,14).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The valves can slide along each other (5, 7) and do not get dislocated under natural conditions, because they are longitudinally connected via a tongue-and-groove mechanism (5,(8)(9)(10). The ovipositor and the "wasp waist," a constriction of the body between the first and second abdominal segment (11), are essential in probing behavior and are therefore considered to be instrumental in the evolution of the order (11)(12)(13)(14)(15). The shape, structure, and mechanical properties of the ovipositors are putatively adapted to the substrates into which the animals need to probe (6,(16)(17)(18), and because both substrates and hosts are so diverse, this might have resulted in high species diversification of the hymenopterans (13,14).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps, then, bees did evolve more complex brains as they became more social, and it is only wasps that rely on collective "swarm intelligence." Recently, solid large-scale phylogenies have become available of all of the major social insect groups and their direct solitary ancestors (6,(20)(21)(22)(23)(24) (Fig. 1).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even the relationship of Ceraphronoidea to other Hymenoptera remains unclear, although the superfamily is robustly monophyletic (Mikó et al 2013). Different molecular analyses have grouped Ceraphronoidea with Stephanoidea, Ichneumonoidea, Megalyroidea, or with Ichneumonoidea and Proctotrupomorpha (Klopfstein et al 2013;Mao et al 2014;Peters et al 2017;Sharkey 2007;Sharkey et al 2012). Contrary to the belief that ceraphronoids are too small for morphological characters to be of phylogenetic use (Klopfstein et al 2013), the group contains taxa with morphological structures that may serve as characters to corroborate both the phylogenetic relationships among members within the superfamily.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…As the putative sister to Apocrita, Orussidae represent an important step in the evolution of Hymenoptera and the parasitoid lifestyle (Mao et al 2014;Peters et al 2017;Sharkey 2007). Orussidae also have patches of smooth cuticle similar to the syntergal and synsternal translucent patches found in Ceraphronoidea.…”
Section: Phylogenetic Relevance Of the Syntergal And Synsternal Transmentioning
confidence: 99%