1999
DOI: 10.1046/j.1570-7458.1999.00486.x
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It's about time: the evidence for host plant‐mediated selection in the apple maggot fly, Rhagoletis pomonella, and its implications for fitness trade‐offs in phytophagous insects

Abstract: The apple maggot fly, Rhagoletis pomonella, Walsh (Diptera: Tephritidae), provides a unique opportunity to address the issue of host-related fitness trade-offs for phytophagous insects. Rhagoletis pomonella has been controversial since the 1860's when Benjamin Walsh cited the fly's shift from hawthorn (Crataegus spp.) to apple (Malus pumila) as an example of an incipient sympatric speciation event. Allozyme and mark-release-recapture studies have subsequently confirmed the status of apple and hawthorn flies as… Show more

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Cited by 123 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…Evolution of macro-evolutionary divergence in plant-herbivore interactions has therefore in many cases probably been embedded within an allopatric divergence (Thompson 2005;Nyman et al 2010), and it may be difficult to disentangle these two processes (Rundell and Price 2009). The alternative, that divergence evolved in sympatry, has been suggested for herbivores adapting to specific host plants (Edmunds and Alstad 1978;Feder and Filchak 1999;Dres and Mallet 2002;De Jong et al 2009), but is much less likely in plants due to their requirement for external pollination agents for reproduction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evolution of macro-evolutionary divergence in plant-herbivore interactions has therefore in many cases probably been embedded within an allopatric divergence (Thompson 2005;Nyman et al 2010), and it may be difficult to disentangle these two processes (Rundell and Price 2009). The alternative, that divergence evolved in sympatry, has been suggested for herbivores adapting to specific host plants (Edmunds and Alstad 1978;Feder and Filchak 1999;Dres and Mallet 2002;De Jong et al 2009), but is much less likely in plants due to their requirement for external pollination agents for reproduction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the last decades a growing body of evidence has assigned an important role for ecology in speciation and species maintenance (Losos et al 1997;Feder and Filchak 1999;Rundle et al 2000;Schluter, 2000;Hollander et al 2005). In secondary contact zones between recently separated species ecological character displacement driven by interspecific competition is likely to continue the species divergence into less overlapping niches (Schluter 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apple and hawthorn flies show clear evidence for differences in reproductive isolation, host odor preferences, and genetic differentiation throughout the US (Feder and Filchak, 1999;Filchak et al, 2000;Michel et al, 2010). Apple flies emerge an average three weeks earlier than hawthorn flies (Feder and Filchak, 1999).…”
Section: Human-mediated Migration Of Crops Triggers Host Shiftsmentioning
confidence: 97%