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Two lineages of kingfisher feather lice exhibit differing degrees of cospeciation with their hosts.
Parasitology. 2019 07; 146(8):1083-1095.P

Abstract

Unlike most bird species, individual kingfisher species (Aves: Alcedinidae) are typically parasitized by only a single genus of louse (Alcedoffula, Alcedoecus, or Emersoniella). These louse genera are typically specific to a particular kingfisher subfamily. Specifically, Alcedoecus and Emersoniella parasitize Halcyoninae, whereas Alcedoffula parasitizes Alcedininae and Cerylinae. Although Emersoniella is geographically restricted to the Indo-Pacific region, Alcedoecus and Alcedoffula are geographically widespread. We used DNA sequences from two genes, the mitochondrial COI and nuclear EF-1α genes, to infer phylogenies for the two geographically widespread genera of kingfisher lice, Alcedoffula and Alcedoecus. These phylogenies included 47 kingfisher lice sampled from 11 of the 19 currently recognized genera of kingfishers. We compared louse phylogenies to host phylogenies to reconstruct their cophylogenetic history. Two distinct clades occur within Alcedoffula, one that infests Alcedininae and a second that infests Cerylinae. All species of Alcedoecus were found only on host species of the subfamily Halcyoninae. Cophylogenetic analysis indicated that Alcedoecus, as well as the clade of Alcedoffula occurring on Alcedininae, do not show evidence of cospeciation. In contrast, the clade of Alcedoffula occurring on Cerylinae showed strong evidence of cospeciation.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Ornithology,Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University,1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway,Philadelphia,PA, 19103,USA.Illinois Natural History Survey,Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinoisat Urbana-Champaign,1816 S. Oak St.,Champaign,IL, 61820,USA.Field Museum of Natural History,Science and Education,1400 S. Lake Shore Drive,Chicago,IL 60605,USA.Department of Ecology and Evolutionary BiologyandBiodiversity Institute, University of Kansas,1345 Jayhawk Blvd.,Lawrence,KS, 66045,USA.Biotério da Universidade Iguaçu,2134 Av. Abílio Augusto Távora,Nova Iguaçu,RJ, 26260-045,Brazil.Department of Ornithology,Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, and Department of Biodiversity, Earth, and Environmental Sciences, Drexel University,1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway,Philadelphia,PA, 19103,USA.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

31046855

Citation

Catanach, Therese A., et al. "Two Lineages of Kingfisher Feather Lice Exhibit Differing Degrees of Cospeciation With Their Hosts." Parasitology, vol. 146, no. 8, 2019, pp. 1083-1095.
Catanach TA, Johnson KP, Marks BD, et al. Two lineages of kingfisher feather lice exhibit differing degrees of cospeciation with their hosts. Parasitology. 2019;146(8):1083-1095.
Catanach, T. A., Johnson, K. P., Marks, B. D., Moyle, R. G., Valim, M. P., & Weckstein, J. D. (2019). Two lineages of kingfisher feather lice exhibit differing degrees of cospeciation with their hosts. Parasitology, 146(8), 1083-1095. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182019000453
Catanach TA, et al. Two Lineages of Kingfisher Feather Lice Exhibit Differing Degrees of Cospeciation With Their Hosts. Parasitology. 2019;146(8):1083-1095. PubMed PMID: 31046855.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Two lineages of kingfisher feather lice exhibit differing degrees of cospeciation with their hosts. AU - Catanach,Therese A, AU - Johnson,Kevin P, AU - Marks,Ben D, AU - Moyle,Robert G, AU - Valim,Michel P, AU - Weckstein,Jason D, Y1 - 2019/05/03/ PY - 2019/5/3/pubmed PY - 2020/4/28/medline PY - 2019/5/4/entrez KW - Biogeography KW - Phthiraptera KW - cospeciation KW - lice KW - phylogenetics SP - 1083 EP - 1095 JF - Parasitology JO - Parasitology VL - 146 IS - 8 N2 - Unlike most bird species, individual kingfisher species (Aves: Alcedinidae) are typically parasitized by only a single genus of louse (Alcedoffula, Alcedoecus, or Emersoniella). These louse genera are typically specific to a particular kingfisher subfamily. Specifically, Alcedoecus and Emersoniella parasitize Halcyoninae, whereas Alcedoffula parasitizes Alcedininae and Cerylinae. Although Emersoniella is geographically restricted to the Indo-Pacific region, Alcedoecus and Alcedoffula are geographically widespread. We used DNA sequences from two genes, the mitochondrial COI and nuclear EF-1α genes, to infer phylogenies for the two geographically widespread genera of kingfisher lice, Alcedoffula and Alcedoecus. These phylogenies included 47 kingfisher lice sampled from 11 of the 19 currently recognized genera of kingfishers. We compared louse phylogenies to host phylogenies to reconstruct their cophylogenetic history. Two distinct clades occur within Alcedoffula, one that infests Alcedininae and a second that infests Cerylinae. All species of Alcedoecus were found only on host species of the subfamily Halcyoninae. Cophylogenetic analysis indicated that Alcedoecus, as well as the clade of Alcedoffula occurring on Alcedininae, do not show evidence of cospeciation. In contrast, the clade of Alcedoffula occurring on Cerylinae showed strong evidence of cospeciation. SN - 1469-8161 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/31046855/Two_lineages_of_kingfisher_feather_lice_exhibit_differing_degrees_of_cospeciation_with_their_hosts_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -