Date of Award

1997

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Department

Entomology

First Advisor

Dorothy Prowell

Abstract

Pitcher plants and pitcher plant moths exhibit two prominent themes in the long evolutionary history between plants and insects. These themes are carnivory and herbivory. In pitcher plants, the leaf has been modified into an elegant pitfall trap enabling these plants to subsist at both the producer and consumer trophic levels. Of the numerous insect species intimately associated with pitcher plants, pitcher plant moths are the only inquilines which have evolved the capacity to disrupt both the carnivore and photosynthetic functions of the host plant. The carnivorous habit, considered an adaptation for nutrient deficient environments, has contributed to species radiations on three continents in the pitcher plant lineage and the allied insect trapping South African flybush lineage. In addition, pitcher plant moths display incipient host species specialization in larval feeding preference so that speciation in the moths may be a response to radiation in the pitcher plants. The focus of this study has been the elucidation of patterns of speciation in both the pitcher plant and moth lineages. In chapters two and four, molecular phylogenetic reconstructions based on DNA sequence data are derived for the pitcher plant and moth lineages respectively. The sequence of origination of genera in the pitcher plant lineage was also approached by cladistic analysis of morphological data (chapter three). Trends in the evolution of host plant use by the moths are examined in parallel with species radiation in the host in chapter four. Insights regarding landscape evolution gleaned from the palynological literature were then combined with laboratory investigations of biological evolution at the molecular level in order to derive speciation models for both the plant and moth lineages (chapter five). Levels of divergence were commiserate with Holocene age estimates of landscape evolution reported in the palynological literature.

ISBN

9780591614619

Pages

88

DOI

10.31390/gradschool_disstheses.6547

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