生物
单倍体
交配
人口
生态学
异域物种形成
动物
遗传学
倍性
人口学
社会学
基因
作者
Shu‐Sheng Liu,Paul J. De Barro,Jing Xu,Junbo Luan,Lian‐Sheng Zang,Yongming Ruan,Fanghao Wan
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2007-11-09
卷期号:318 (5857): 1769-1772
被引量:443
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1149887
摘要
The role of behavioral mechanisms in animal invasions is poorly understood. We show that asymmetric mating interactions between closely related but previously allopatric genetic groups of the whitefly Bemisia tabaci, a haplodiploid species, have been a driving force contributing to widespread invasion and displacement by alien populations. We conducted long-term field surveys, caged population experiments, and detailed behavioral observations in Zhejiang, China, and Queensland, Australia, to investigate the invasion process and its underlying behavioral mechanisms. During invasion and displacement, we found increased frequency of copulation leading to increased production of female progeny among the invader, as well as reduced copulation and female production in the indigenous genetic groups. Such asymmetric mating interactions may be critical to determining the capacity of a haplodiploid invader and the consequences for its closely related indigenous organisms.
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