Abstract

Canonical variate analysis (CVA) on morphological distance measurements shows that differences exist among adult samples of A. alneti taken from a number of host plant species in South Wales. This variation is also correlated with variation in the degree of yellow pigmentation. Adults taken from alder and hazel form extremes in a continuum of variation, those from alder being larger and more pigmented. The variation between these two populations is greater than host-independent variation among samples of each population taken from a number of individual trees at different localities in Britain in different years. Ordination shows that the variation between the alder and hazel populations is along different axes to that among samples in these populations. Different axes of variation are also found among adults from different pairs of host plant species. Multiple-group principal component analysis (MGPCA) suggests that much of the variation between adults from alder and hazel may be interpreted as allometry-free 'shape' that is uncorrelated with variation in overall size within each population. Transfer experiments showed that the differences in both size and shape may have little genetic basis and are probably host plant induced. The taxonomic and ecological implications of these results are discussed.

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