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Dryad

Temporal isolation between sympatric host plants cascades across multiple trophic levels of host-associated insects

Cite this dataset

Zhang, Linyi; Hood, Glen; Ott, James; Egan, Scott (2019). Temporal isolation between sympatric host plants cascades across multiple trophic levels of host-associated insects [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.h44j0zpf9

Abstract

Phenological differences between host plants can promote temporal isolation among host-associated populations of insects with life cycles tightly coupled to plant phenology. Divergence in the timing of spring budbreak between two sympatric sister oak species has been shown to promote temporal isolation between host plants and their host-associated populations of a cynipid gall wasp. Here we examined the generality of this mechanism by testing the hypothesis of cascading temporal isolation for five additional gall-formers and three natural enemy species associated with these same oak species. The timing of adult emergence from galls differed significantly between host-associated populations for all nine species and parallels the direction of the phenological differences between host plants. Differences in emergence timing can reduce gene flow between host-associated populations by diminishing mating opportunities and/or reducing fitness of immigrants due to differences in the availability of ephemeral resources. Our study suggests that cascading temporal isolation could be a powerful “biodiversity generator” across multiple trophic levels in tightly coupled plant-insect systems.