Assistant Professor The Ohio State University Lima, Ohio
A major goal of evolutionary biology is to understand the mechanisms that shape biodiversity, especially amongst highly speciose lineages such as parasitic wasps. However, most of these lineages are poorly described, with very little available natural history information. This lack of information limits our ability to uncover the environmental factors that contribute to their patterns of divergence, distribution, and abundance. To that end, here we take advantage of a community of hymenopteran parasitoids that has an unusually large amount of available information since they attack an economically important pine sawfly species, Neodiprion lecontei. We build upon a set of historical literature to produce the most comprehensive survey of this parasitoid community to date and identify limitations of the current species concept. Next, for a subset of this community, we generate COI sequences to examine species boundaries using multiple species delimitation methods. Finally, we incorporate morphological and ecological information for these putative species to interpret our results in light of their interactions with their sawfly host.