Speciation-model

Guides

  • Acrocercops

    Acrocercops is a genus of leaf-mining moths in the family Gracillariidae. Species in this genus are primarily known as internal feeders on plant foliage, creating mines within leaves. Several species have been extensively studied as models for host race formation and host-associated speciation, particularly A. transecta, which exhibits distinct host races on distantly related plant families. The genus includes both native and invasive species, with some members recognized as agricultural pests.

  • Heliconius

    longwings, heliconians

    Heliconius is a genus of brush-footed butterflies renowned for their bright aposematic wing patterns and Müllerian mimicry rings. Adults are unique among butterflies in their ability to collect and digest pollen, which provides essential amino acids enabling lifespans of up to six months—far exceeding most butterflies. The genus serves as a premier model system for studying speciation, mimicry evolution, and coevolutionary dynamics with their host plants. Approximately 45–50 species occur across the Neotropics, exhibiting complex patterns of wing color convergence and divergence.

  • Jaera

    Jaera is a genus of small marine isopods in the family Janiridae, comprising more than 20 described species. The genus is notable for the Jaera albifrons species complex, a group of closely related, sympatric species that exhibit fine-scale habitat partitioning along intertidal shores. These isopods are euryhaline, capable of osmoregulation across wide salinity ranges from freshwater-influenced areas to fully marine conditions. The group has been extensively studied for its ecological differentiation, reproductive isolation, and as a model for understanding speciation processes in marine environments.

  • Mordellistena convicta

    tumbling flower beetle, gall-boring beetle, inquiline beetle

    Mordellistena convicta is a gall-boring beetle in the family Mordellidae, described by LeConte in 1862. The species is an inquiline that inhabits galls induced by the goldenrod gall fly (Eurosta solidaginis) on goldenrod plants (Solidago spp.). It has been studied as a model system for sequential radiation and host-associated speciation, with populations showing differentiation corresponding to the host races of their gall fly associates. Adults use olfactory cues from gall tissues to locate suitable host plants for mating and oviposition.