Specialization, speciation, and radiation: the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Berkeley [u.a.]
University of California Press
2008
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XV, 341 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780520251328 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Specialization, speciation, and radiation |b the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |c edited by Kelley Jean Tilmon |
264 | 1 | |a Berkeley [u.a.] |b University of California Press |c 2008 | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text |
SPECIALIZATION,
SPECIATION, AND
RADIATION
THE EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
OF HERBIVOROUS INSECTS
Edited by
KELLEY JEAN TILMON
IP
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Berkeley Los Angeles London
CONTENTS
CONTRIBUTORS xi
PREFACE xiii
Kelley J Tilmon
PART I
Evolution of Populations and Species
1 Chemical Mediation of Host-Plant Specialization:
The Papilionid Paradigm 3
May R Berenbaum and Paul P Feeny
How Lepidopterans Prefer 4
How Lepidopteran Larvae Perform 4
Preference-Performance Relationships in
Lepidoptera 5
Chemical Mediation of Preference and Performance:
Papilionids as Paradigm 6
Identifying the Chemical Cues: Kairomones and
Allomones 8
Preference and Performance Genes 11
P450s and Host-Use Evolution 14
Conclusions IS
2 Evolution of Preference and Performance
Relationships 20
Timothy P Craig and Joanne K Itami
Limiting Constraints 21
Preference and Performance in Three Well-Studied
Interactions 22
Alternative Hypotheses 26
Testing Hypotheses on Preference and
Performance 27
Conclusion 27
3 Evolutionary Ecology of Polyphagy 29
Michael S Singer
General Explanations for Host Specificity 30
What about Polyphagy? 31
Trade-offs as Explanations for Host-Plant Use 32
Testing Theory with Polyphagous Woolly Bear
Caterpillars 34
Conclusions 39
4 Phenotypic Plasticity 43
Kailen A Mooney and Anurag A Agrawal
Adaptive Value and Costs of Phenotypic Plasticity 43
The Consequences of Phenotypic Plasticity 48
Future Directions 51
5 Selection and Genetic Architecture of Plant
Resistance 58
Mary Ellen Czesak, Robert S Fritz, and Cris Hochwender
Selection on Resistance within Populations 58
Genetic Architecture of Resistance Traits between
Populations and Species 61
Architecture of Resistance in a Willow Hybrid
System 62
Summary 66
6 Introgression and Parapatric Speciation in a Hybrid
Zone 69
] Mark Scriber, Gabe J Ording, and Rodrigo J Mercader
Hybrid Zones, Evolutionary Novelties, and
Isolation 69
Climate Warming, Thermal Constraints, and
Voltinism 70
The Tiger Swallowtail Butterflies 70
Hybrid Papilio Populations and Species 75
The Nuts and Bolts 78
v i i
Molecular Work 82
Future Efforts 82
Summary 83
7 Host Shifts, the Evolution of Communication, and
Speciation in the Enchenopa binotata Species
Complex of Treehoppers 88
Reginald B Cocroft, Rafael L Rodriguez, and
Randy E Hunt
Ecological Isolation in the £ binotata
Complex 89
Behavioral Sources of Assortative
Mating 90
Communication in a New Host
Environment 93
Summary 97
8 Host Fruit-Odor Discrimination and Sympatric
Host -Race Format ion 101
Jeffrey L Feder and Andrew A Forbes
The Adaptive Zone Hypothesis 102
Ecological Adaptation, Host-Specific Mating, and
Reproductive Isolation 102
Tom Wood and Ron Prokopy: Two Pioneers in the
Study of Insect Behavior and Diversity 103
Natural and Life History of Rhagoletis
pomonella 103
Behavioral Testing Using Synthetic Fruit Volatile
Blends 104
Genetic Analysis of Fruit-Odor Discrimination 107
Physiological Basis for Fruit-Odor Discrimination 108
A Genetic Model for Fruit-Odor Discrimination 109
Theoretical Significance of the Fruit-Odor
—Discrimination Studies 110
Future Directions and-Conclusions 112
Appendix: The Four-Component Genetic Model for
Fruit-Odor Discrimination 112
9 Comparative Analyses of Ecological Speciation 117
Daniel J Funk and Patrik Nosil
Ecological Speciation 117
Herbivorous Insect Exemplars 118
Comparative Approaches and Ecological
Speciation 120
Herbivore Analyses and Insights 122
Comparative Caveats 129
Opportunities and Directions 131
10 Sympatric Speciation: Norm or Exception? 136
Douglas J Futuyma
Theory 137
Biological Considerations 138
Evidence on Sympatric Speciation 141
The Allopatric Alternative 143
Conclusions 144
PART I I
Co- and Macroevolutionary Radiation
11 Host-Plant Use, Diversification, and Coevolution:
Ins ights f rom Remote Oceanic Is lands 151
George K Roderick and Diana M Percy
Islands as a Model System 151
Lessons from Island Systems 152
Conclusions 158
12 Selection by Pollinators and Herbivores on Attraction
and Defense 162
Lynn S Adler
Selection by Pollinators on Plant Resistance 163
Selection by Herbivores on Floral Traits 164
Resistance and Attractions Traits May Not Be
Independent 165
Herbivores and Pollinators May Not Be
Independent 166
Abiotic Factors and Geographic Variation 167
Future Directions 167
13 Adaptive Radiation: Phylogenetic Constraints and
Ecological Consequences 174
Peter W Price
The Phylogenetic Constraints Hypothesis 175
Adaptive Capture and Escape 176
The Adaptive Radiation of Common
Sawflies 177
Convergence of Constraints 177
Divergent Constraints 179
The Similarities of Temperate and Tropical Insect
Herbivores 180
Adaptive Radiation in Temperate and Tropical
Environments 183
14 Sequential Radiation through Host-Race Formation:
Herbivore Diversity Leads to Diversity in Natural
Enemies 188
Warren G Abrahamson and Catherine P Blair
Species Cause Species: Sympatric Speciation through
Host-Race Formation 188
Sequential Radiation 189
Conditions for Host-Race Formation 189
Cases of Sequential Radiation via Host-Race
Formation 190
Example Showing No Differentiation 196
Conclusions 197
Sympatric Speciation Studies 199
15 The Oscillation Hypothesis of Host-Plant Range
and Speciation 203
Niklas Janz and Soren Nylin
The Oscillation Hypothesis 204
Colonizations and Host-Range Expansions 204
Synthesis: Speciation Rate 210
Conclusion 213
viiiCONTENTS
16 Coevolution, Cryptic Speciation, and the Persistence
of Interactions 216
John N Thompson
A Blending of Perspectives: Populations, Species, and
Species Interactions 216
Cryptic Speciation in Insects 219
Cryptic Speciation in Plants and Its Effect on
Interactions with Insects 221
Implications 222
17 Cophylogeny of Figs, Pollinators, Gallers, and
Parasitoids 225
Summer I Silvieus, Wendy L Clement, and
George D Weiblen
Background 225
Overview 227
Sampling and DNA Sequencing 227
Phylogenetic Analysis 230
Reconciliation Analysis 230
Phylogenies of Figs and Wasps 231
Host Specificity of Nonpollinating Fig
Wasps 231
Double Dating of Figs and Fig Wasps 232
Modes of Speciation in Fig Pollinators, Gallers, and
Parasitoids 236
Conclusions 237
18 The Phylogenetic Dimension of Insect-Plant
Interactions: A Review of Recent
Evidence 240
Isaac S Winkler and Charles Mitter
Conservatism of Host-Plant Use 241
Signatures of Long-Term History in Extant Insect-
Plant- Interactions 248
Diversification of Phytophagous Insects 253
Synopsis and Conclusions 256
PART III
Evolutionary Aspects of Pests, Invasive Species,
and the Environment
19 Evolution of Insect Resistance to Transgenic
Plants 267
Bruce E Tabashnik and Yves Carriere
Transgenic Crops with Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)
Toxins 267
Bt Toxins and Their Mode of Action 268
Genetic Basis of Resistance to Bt Toxins 268
The Refuge Strategy for Delaying Pest Resistance
to Bt Crops 269
Pink Bollworm versus Bt Cotton in
Arizona 271
Conclusions and a Look to the Future 274
20 Exotic Plants and Enemy Resistance 280
John L Maron and Montserrat Vila
Rapid Evolution of Exotics in Response of Enemy
Pressure 281
Exotics as Substrates for Studying the Evolutionary
Response of Plants to Natural Enemies 281
Hypotheses and Evidence for Plant Defenses 281
Experimental Evidence for Evolution of Exotic Plant
Defense 283
Response of St John's Wort to an Altered Enemy
Landscape 283
Among-Population Variation in Enemy
Resistance 289
Are Differences in Exotic and Native Phenotypes the
Product of Evolution? 290
Conclusions 291
21 Life-History Evolution in Native and Introduced
Populations 296
Robert F Denno, Merrill A Peterson, Matthew R Weaver,
and David J Hawthorne
Life-History Strategy and Dispersal Ecology of
Prokelisia Planthoppers 297
Geographic Distribution of the Insect and Host 298
Geographic Source of Introduced Populations 299
Genetic Variation in Native and Introduced
Populations 300
Variation in Dispersal, Associated Reproductive
Traits, and Voltinism 301
Genetic Basis for Geographic Variation in the
Incidence of Dispersal 302
Habitat Factors Underlying Geographic Variation in
Dispersal 303
Conclusions and Synthesis 305
22 Rapid Natural and Anthropogenic Diet Evolution: Three
Examples f rom Checkerspot But ter f l ies 311
Michael C Singer, Brian Wee, Sara Hawkins, and
Marie Butcher
Checkerspot Butterflies as a Study System 311
First Host Shift, at Schneider's Meadow 313
Second Host Shift, at Rabbit Meadow 314
Third Host shift, at Sonora Junction 318
Types of Anthropogenic Effect 319
Cryptically Anthropogenic Effects 320
Conclusions 322
23 Conservation of Coevolved Insect Herbivores and
Plants 325
Carol L Boggs and Paul R Ehrlich
Habitat Destruction 326
Species Introductions 327
Changes in Disturbance Regimes 329
Climate Change 329
Complex Interactions: Conservation Implications 330
Conclusion 330
INDEX 333
CONTENTSix |
adam_txt |
SPECIALIZATION,
SPECIATION, AND
RADIATION
THE EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
OF HERBIVOROUS INSECTS
Edited by
KELLEY JEAN TILMON
IP
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Berkeley Los Angeles London
CONTENTS
CONTRIBUTORS xi
PREFACE xiii
Kelley J Tilmon
PART I
Evolution of Populations and Species
1 Chemical Mediation of Host-Plant Specialization:
The Papilionid Paradigm 3
May R Berenbaum and Paul P Feeny
How Lepidopterans Prefer 4
How Lepidopteran Larvae Perform 4
Preference-Performance Relationships in
Lepidoptera 5
Chemical Mediation of Preference and Performance:
Papilionids as Paradigm 6
Identifying the Chemical Cues: Kairomones and
Allomones 8
Preference and Performance Genes 11
P450s and Host-Use Evolution 14
Conclusions IS
2 Evolution of Preference and Performance
Relationships 20
Timothy P Craig and Joanne K Itami
Limiting Constraints 21
Preference and Performance in Three Well-Studied
Interactions 22
Alternative Hypotheses 26
Testing Hypotheses on Preference and
Performance 27
Conclusion 27
3 Evolutionary Ecology of Polyphagy 29
Michael S Singer
General Explanations for Host Specificity 30
What about Polyphagy? 31
Trade-offs as Explanations for Host-Plant Use 32
Testing Theory with Polyphagous Woolly Bear
Caterpillars 34
Conclusions 39
4 Phenotypic Plasticity 43
Kailen A Mooney and Anurag A Agrawal
Adaptive Value and Costs of Phenotypic Plasticity 43
The Consequences of Phenotypic Plasticity 48
Future Directions 51
5 Selection and Genetic Architecture of Plant
Resistance 58
Mary Ellen Czesak, Robert S Fritz, and Cris Hochwender
Selection on Resistance within Populations 58
Genetic Architecture of Resistance Traits between
Populations and Species 61
Architecture of Resistance in a Willow Hybrid
System 62
Summary 66
6 Introgression and Parapatric Speciation in a Hybrid
Zone 69
] Mark Scriber, Gabe J Ording, and Rodrigo J Mercader
Hybrid Zones, Evolutionary Novelties, and
Isolation 69
Climate Warming, Thermal Constraints, and
Voltinism 70
The Tiger Swallowtail Butterflies 70
Hybrid Papilio Populations and Species 75
The Nuts and Bolts 78
v i i
Molecular Work 82
Future Efforts 82
Summary 83
7 Host Shifts, the Evolution of Communication, and
Speciation in the Enchenopa binotata Species
Complex of Treehoppers 88
Reginald B Cocroft, Rafael L Rodriguez, and
Randy E Hunt
Ecological Isolation in the £ binotata
Complex 89
Behavioral Sources of Assortative
Mating 90
Communication in a New Host
Environment 93
Summary 97
8 Host Fruit-Odor Discrimination and Sympatric
Host -Race Format ion 101
Jeffrey L Feder and Andrew A Forbes
The Adaptive Zone Hypothesis 102
Ecological Adaptation, Host-Specific Mating, and
Reproductive Isolation 102
Tom Wood and Ron Prokopy: Two Pioneers in the
Study of Insect Behavior and Diversity 103
Natural and Life History of Rhagoletis
pomonella 103
Behavioral Testing Using Synthetic Fruit Volatile
Blends 104
Genetic Analysis of Fruit-Odor Discrimination 107
Physiological Basis for Fruit-Odor Discrimination 108
A Genetic Model for Fruit-Odor Discrimination 109
Theoretical Significance of the Fruit-Odor
—Discrimination Studies 110
Future Directions and-Conclusions 112
Appendix: The Four-Component Genetic Model for
Fruit-Odor Discrimination 112
9 Comparative Analyses of Ecological Speciation 117
Daniel J Funk and Patrik Nosil
Ecological Speciation 117
Herbivorous Insect Exemplars 118
Comparative Approaches and Ecological
Speciation 120
Herbivore Analyses and Insights 122
Comparative Caveats 129
Opportunities and Directions 131
10 Sympatric Speciation: Norm or Exception? 136
Douglas J Futuyma
Theory 137
Biological Considerations 138
Evidence on Sympatric Speciation 141
The Allopatric Alternative 143
Conclusions 144
PART I I
Co- and Macroevolutionary Radiation
11 Host-Plant Use, Diversification, and Coevolution:
Ins ights f rom Remote Oceanic Is lands 151
George K Roderick and Diana M Percy
Islands as a Model System 151
Lessons from Island Systems 152
Conclusions 158
12 Selection by Pollinators and Herbivores on Attraction
and Defense 162
Lynn S Adler
Selection by Pollinators on Plant Resistance 163
Selection by Herbivores on Floral Traits 164
Resistance and Attractions Traits May Not Be
Independent 165
Herbivores and Pollinators May Not Be
Independent 166
Abiotic Factors and Geographic Variation 167
Future Directions 167
13 Adaptive Radiation: Phylogenetic Constraints and
Ecological Consequences 174
Peter W Price
The Phylogenetic Constraints Hypothesis 175
Adaptive Capture and Escape 176
The Adaptive Radiation of Common
Sawflies 177
Convergence of Constraints 177
Divergent Constraints 179
The Similarities of Temperate and Tropical Insect
Herbivores 180
Adaptive Radiation in Temperate and Tropical
Environments 183
14 Sequential Radiation through Host-Race Formation:
Herbivore Diversity Leads to Diversity in Natural
Enemies 188
Warren G Abrahamson and Catherine P Blair
Species Cause Species: Sympatric Speciation through
Host-Race Formation 188
Sequential Radiation 189
Conditions for Host-Race Formation 189
Cases of Sequential Radiation via Host-Race
Formation 190
Example Showing No Differentiation 196
Conclusions 197
Sympatric Speciation Studies 199
15 The Oscillation Hypothesis of Host-Plant Range
and Speciation 203
Niklas Janz and Soren Nylin
The Oscillation Hypothesis 204
Colonizations and Host-Range Expansions 204
Synthesis: Speciation Rate 210
Conclusion 213
viiiCONTENTS
16 Coevolution, Cryptic Speciation, and the Persistence
of Interactions 216
John N Thompson
A Blending of Perspectives: Populations, Species, and
Species Interactions 216
Cryptic Speciation in Insects 219
Cryptic Speciation in Plants and Its Effect on
Interactions with Insects 221
Implications 222
17 Cophylogeny of Figs, Pollinators, Gallers, and
Parasitoids 225
Summer I Silvieus, Wendy L Clement, and
George D Weiblen
Background 225
Overview 227
Sampling and DNA Sequencing 227
Phylogenetic Analysis 230
Reconciliation Analysis 230
Phylogenies of Figs and Wasps 231
Host Specificity of Nonpollinating Fig
Wasps 231
Double Dating of Figs and Fig Wasps 232
Modes of Speciation in Fig Pollinators, Gallers, and
Parasitoids 236
Conclusions 237
18 The Phylogenetic Dimension of Insect-Plant
Interactions: A Review of Recent
Evidence 240
Isaac S Winkler and Charles Mitter
Conservatism of Host-Plant Use 241
Signatures of Long-Term History in Extant Insect-
Plant- Interactions 248
Diversification of Phytophagous Insects 253
Synopsis and Conclusions 256
PART III
Evolutionary Aspects of Pests, Invasive Species,
and the Environment
19 Evolution of Insect Resistance to Transgenic
Plants 267
Bruce E Tabashnik and Yves Carriere
Transgenic Crops with Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt)
Toxins 267
Bt Toxins and Their Mode of Action 268
Genetic Basis of Resistance to Bt Toxins 268
The Refuge Strategy for Delaying Pest Resistance
to Bt Crops 269
Pink Bollworm versus Bt Cotton in
Arizona 271
Conclusions and a Look to the Future 274
20 Exotic Plants and Enemy Resistance 280
John L Maron and Montserrat Vila
Rapid Evolution of Exotics in Response of Enemy
Pressure 281
Exotics as Substrates for Studying the Evolutionary
Response of Plants to Natural Enemies 281
Hypotheses and Evidence for Plant Defenses 281
Experimental Evidence for Evolution of Exotic Plant
Defense 283
Response of St John's Wort to an Altered Enemy
Landscape 283
Among-Population Variation in Enemy
Resistance 289
Are Differences in Exotic and Native Phenotypes the
Product of Evolution? 290
Conclusions 291
21 Life-History Evolution in Native and Introduced
Populations 296
Robert F Denno, Merrill A Peterson, Matthew R Weaver,
and David J Hawthorne
Life-History Strategy and Dispersal Ecology of
Prokelisia Planthoppers 297
Geographic Distribution of the Insect and Host 298
Geographic Source of Introduced Populations 299
Genetic Variation in Native and Introduced
Populations 300
Variation in Dispersal, Associated Reproductive
Traits, and Voltinism 301
Genetic Basis for Geographic Variation in the
Incidence of Dispersal 302
Habitat Factors Underlying Geographic Variation in
Dispersal 303
Conclusions and Synthesis 305
22 Rapid Natural and Anthropogenic Diet Evolution: Three
Examples f rom Checkerspot But ter f l ies 311
Michael C Singer, Brian Wee, Sara Hawkins, and
Marie Butcher
Checkerspot Butterflies as a Study System 311
First Host Shift, at Schneider's Meadow 313
Second Host Shift, at Rabbit Meadow 314
Third Host shift, at Sonora Junction 318
Types of Anthropogenic Effect 319
Cryptically Anthropogenic Effects 320
Conclusions 322
23 Conservation of Coevolved Insect Herbivores and
Plants 325
Carol L Boggs and Paul R Ehrlich
Habitat Destruction 326
Species Introductions 327
Changes in Disturbance Regimes 329
Climate Change 329
Complex Interactions: Conservation Implications 330
Conclusion 330
INDEX 333
CONTENTSix |
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any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
building | Verbundindex |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)263690792 (DE-599)BSZ277385636 |
dewey-full | 595.7138 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
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dewey-raw | 595.7138 |
dewey-search | 595.7138 |
dewey-sort | 3595.7138 |
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discipline_str_mv | Biologie |
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id | DE-604.BV023340850 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:01:35Z |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780520251328 |
language | English |
lccn | 2007032362 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016524617 |
oclc_num | 263690792 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-B16 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-B16 |
physical | XV, 341 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | University of California Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects edited by Kelley Jean Tilmon Berkeley [u.a.] University of California Press 2008 XV, 341 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index Insects Evolution Insects Behavior Insect-plant relationships Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd rswk-swf Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd rswk-swf Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 s Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 s DE-604 Tilmon, Kelley Jean Sonstige oth HEBIS Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016524617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects Insects Evolution Insects Behavior Insect-plant relationships Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4027110-9 (DE-588)4045539-7 |
title | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
title_auth | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
title_exact_search | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
title_exact_search_txtP | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
title_full | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects edited by Kelley Jean Tilmon |
title_fullStr | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects edited by Kelley Jean Tilmon |
title_full_unstemmed | Specialization, speciation, and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects edited by Kelley Jean Tilmon |
title_short | Specialization, speciation, and radiation |
title_sort | specialization speciation and radiation the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
title_sub | the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects |
topic | Insects Evolution Insects Behavior Insect-plant relationships Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Pflanzen (DE-588)4045539-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Insects Evolution Insects Behavior Insect-plant relationships Insekten Pflanzen |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016524617&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT tilmonkelleyjean specializationspeciationandradiationtheevolutionarybiologyofherbivorousinsects |