The pattern is best known for various
taxa of
Hymenoptera. For example, the
social wasp Dolichovespula adulterina parasitizes other members of its genus such as
Dolichovespula norwegica and
Dolichovespula arenaria. Emery's rule is also applicable to members of other kingdoms such as
fungi,
red algae, and
mistletoe. The significance and general relevance of this pattern are still a matter of some debate, as a great many exceptions exist, though a common explanation for the phenomenon when it occurs is that the parasites may have started as
facultative parasites within the host species itself (such forms of intraspecific parasitism are well-known, even in some species of
bees), but later became reproductively isolated and split off from the ancestral species, a form of
sympatric speciation. When a parasitic species is a
sister taxon to its host in a
phylogenetic sense, the relationship is considered to be in "strict" adherence to Emery's rule. When the parasite is a close relative of the host but not its sister species, the relationship is in "loose" adherence to the rule. ==References==