Abstract
BackgroundSymbiotic relationships have contributed to major evolutionary innovations, the maintenance of fundamental ecosystem functions, and the generation and maintenance of biodiversity. However, the exact nature of host/symbiont associations, which has important consequences for their dynamics, is often poorly known due to limited understanding of symbiont taxonomy and species diversity. Among classical symbioses, figs and their pollinating wasps constitute a highly diverse keystone resource in tropical forest and savannah environments. Historically, they were considered to exemplify extreme reciprocal partner specificity (one-to-one host-symbiont species relationships), but recent work has revealed several more complex cases. However, there is a striking lack of studies with the specific aims of assessing symbiont diversity and how this varies across the geographic range of the host.ResultsHere, we use molecular methods to investigate cryptic diversity in the pollinating wasps of a widespread Australian fig species. Standard barcoding genes and methods were not conclusive, but incorporation of phylogenetic analyses and a recently developed nuclear barcoding gene (ITS2), gave strong support for five pollinator species. Each pollinator species was most common in a different geographic region, emphasising the importance of wide geographic sampling to uncover diversity, and the scope for divergence in coevolutionary trajectories across the host plant range. In addition, most regions had multiple coexisting pollinators, raising the question of how they coexist in apparently similar or identical resource niches.ConclusionOur study offers a striking example of extreme deviation from reciprocal partner specificity over the full geographical range of a fig-wasp system. It also suggests that superficially identical species may be able to co-exist in a mutualistic setting albeit at different frequencies in relation to their fig host’s range. We show that comprehensive sampling and molecular taxonomic techniques may be required to uncover the true structure of cryptic biodiversity underpinning intimate ecological interactions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-014-0189-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Symbiotic relationships have contributed to major evolutionary innovations, the maintenance of fundamental ecosystem functions, and the generation and maintenance of biodiversity
We investigate the diversity of pollinator wasps associated with a single widespread fig species, Ficus rubiginosa
Our study supports the existence of at least five wasp species pollinating Ficus rubiginosa. This P. imperialis complex involves more pollinator species than any other fig species studied to date [18], but see [21,49] and our study adds to the growing body of evidence that the diversity of fig wasps, and insects in general, has been greatly underestimated [9,23,50]
Summary
Symbiotic relationships have contributed to major evolutionary innovations, the maintenance of fundamental ecosystem functions, and the generation and maintenance of biodiversity. Figs and their pollinating wasps constitute a highly diverse keystone resource in tropical forest and savannah environments. They were considered to exemplify extreme reciprocal partner specificity (one-to-one host-symbiont species relationships), but recent work has revealed several more complex cases. Figs can only be pollinated by host-specific wasp species, which, in turn, can only reproduce by laying their eggs in fig flowers, upon which their developing larvae feed This association was long considered to be a textbook example of extreme reciprocal partner specificity, with each fig species having a unique pollinator species [9]. This picture has been eroded by several reports of a single fig species hosting multiple pollinator species and a few reports of two fig species sharing pollinator species [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]
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