Understanding the evolutionary dynamics underlying herbivorous insect mega-diversity requires investigating the ability of insects to shift and adapt to different host plants. Feeding experiments with nine related stick insect species revealed that insects retain the ability to use ancestral host plants after shifting to novel hosts, with host plant shifts generating fundamental feeding niche expansions. These expansions were however not accompanied by expansions of the realized feeding niches, as species on novel hosts are generally ecologically specialized. For shifts from angiosperm to chemically challenging conifer hosts, generalist fundamental feeding niches even evolved jointly with strong host plant specialization, indicating that host plant specialization is not driven by constraints imposed by plant chemistry. By coupling analyses of plant chemical compounds, fundamental and ecological feeding niches in multiple insect species, we provide novel insights into the evolutionary dynamics of host range expansion and contraction in herbivorous insects.
Feeding experiment: Weight gain and survival data of Timema fed with different plants
We performed a feeding experiment using 12 Timema populations from 9 Timema species. We measured weight gain and survival of multiple individuals from each of these populations, after feeding them during ten days in 7 different feeding treatments (i.e., 7 different host plants known to be used by some stick insects from the Timema genus under natural conditions)
Larose2018_EcolLetters_feedingexp_data.xlsx
Secondary feeding experiment: Survival data for 3 Timema population fed with 3 novel plants
We performed a feeding experiment using 3 Timema populations from 3 different Timema species. We measured survival of multiple individuals from each of these populations, after feeding them during ten days with 3 plants (i.e., 3 feeding treatments: Rhus ovata (sumac), Baccharis pilularis (coyote), Artemisia californica (sage)) currently not used, to our knowledge, by stick insects of the Timema genus under natural conditions.
Larose2018_EcolLetters_sidefeedingexp_data.xlsx
Phenolic and terpenic chemical composition of 7 Timema host plants
We extracted and quantified compounds in the phenolic and terpene classes of secondary metabolites from leaves of seven Timema stick insects host plant species included in a feeding experiments (i.e., Ceanothus thyrsiflorus (lil), Adenostoma fasciculatum (cha), Quercus agrifolia (oak), Arctostaphylos glauca (mz), Pseudotsuga menziesii (df), Abies concolor (wf), Sequoia sempervirens (rdw); see Table 1 of the related article), for terpenes and phenolics, respectively. For each plant species, we extracted compounds from five independent replicates for both phenols and terpenes (See the related article to know more about the used Methods).
Larose2018_EcolLetters_Plantchemistry_data.xlsx