2020
DOI: 10.1111/syen.12460
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Unexpected cryptic species diversity of parasites of the family Xenidae (Strepsiptera) with a constant diversification rate over time

Abstract: Parasitism is one of the most successful and ancient strategies. Due to the specialized lifestyle of parasites, they are usually affected by reductions and changes in their body plan in comparison with nonparasitic sister groups. Extreme environmental conditions may impose restraints on behavioural or physiological adaptations to a specific host and limit morphological changes associated with speciation. Such morphological homogeneity has led to the diversity of parasites being underestimated in morphological … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(65 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
(119 reference statements)
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“…For the other lineages including specimens identified as X. minor, X. vesparum and X. ropalidiae, we noticed that X. minor and X. vesparum form a clade including four groups (group 6, 7, 8 and 9) (Fig. 6) and their genetic divergences are less than 0.007 (Table 2), suggesting these specimens may be the same species (Benda et al 2021). On the other hand, different populations (Laos, Nepal, Malaysia) of X. ropalidiae form two separate groups (5 and 10) with a genetic divergence of 0.368-0.421 (Table 2), which may include different species (Benda et al 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…For the other lineages including specimens identified as X. minor, X. vesparum and X. ropalidiae, we noticed that X. minor and X. vesparum form a clade including four groups (group 6, 7, 8 and 9) (Fig. 6) and their genetic divergences are less than 0.007 (Table 2), suggesting these specimens may be the same species (Benda et al 2021). On the other hand, different populations (Laos, Nepal, Malaysia) of X. ropalidiae form two separate groups (5 and 10) with a genetic divergence of 0.368-0.421 (Table 2), which may include different species (Benda et al 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Combined with 45 COI sequences of Xenos published by others (Carapelli et al 2006;McMahon et al 2011;Nakase and Kato 2013;Jůzová et al 2015;Benda et al 2021), phylogenetic analyses were performed using maximum likelihood (ML), and maximum parsimony (MP) methods with four strepsipteran species Stylops ater Reichert, 1914, Melittostylops hesperapium Kinzelbach, 1971, Halictoxenos tumulorum Perkins, 1918 and Crawfordia warnckei Kinzelbach, 1970 (Stylopidae) (GenBank Accession: GAZM00000000.2, MK431155, KF803415, MK431154) as outgroups (Misof et al 2014;Jůzová et al 2015;Benda et al 2019 ). Briefly, COI sequences were first translated to amino acid sequences with the invertebrate mitochondrial genetic code, and then aligned by codons using the ClustalW algorithm in MEGA-X v10.1.8 (Sudhir et al 2018).…”
Section: Phylogenetic Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Morphological similarity to the later on one hand and considerable genetic divergence between them strongly suggest the presence of a cryptic species which is not surprising phenomenon especially in case of parasites (e.g. Hanelt et al, 2015;Cai et al, 2020;Benda et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Despite a vast and increasing number of studies, the species richness of many insect communities remains highly uncertain, partly due to a large degree of cryptic, i.e morphologically indistinguishable but genetically distinct, species (Bickford et al ., 2007), especially among many parasitic taxa (e.g. Poulin, 2011a; Pérez‐Ponce de León & Nadler, 2016; Benda et al ., 2021), with potential implications for epidemiology, diagnostics, and our understanding of trophic network topology.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%