Abstract

We studied historical patterns of the association between fleas and jerboas using Brooks parsimony analysis (BPA), tree reconciliation analysis, general parsimony analysis (TreeFitter), and the ParaFit method. A phylogenetic host tree reconstructed by BPA was incongruent with the known host phylogeny and most characters were homoplasious. The optimization of the recoded flea tree on the jerboa tree suggested that the common evolutionary history of fleas and jerboas was characterized mainly by inertia, host switching, and sorting events. There was a geographic pattern in parasite-based jerboa trees. Species with common geographic distribution and/or habitat preferences or common geographic origin tended to cluster together. The fit of the phylogenetic trees of jerboas and their fleas by reconciliation did not need cospeciation, but mainly suggested sorting events. Optimal reconstruction by TreeFitter revealed a significant phylogenetic effect only when the costs of host switching and linear sorting were as...

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