商业蜜蜂群体生殖体遗传多样性和群体间亲缘关系的meta分析

D. Tarpy, Joel R. Caren, D. Delaney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

蜂群是一个庞大的亲属群体,每一个蜂群都有一个蜂王和数千个工蜂。蜂王是高度一夫多妻制的,每只蜂王平均与12只来自其他蜂群的雄蜂交配。我们使用荟萃分析方法比较了五项不同研究中蜜蜂繁殖体(蜂王及其配偶)的谱系关系,并量化了繁殖种群的总体遗传多样性。我们通过对野生非洲化蜜蜂种群(作为近亲繁殖的阴性对照)、实验衍生的姐妹蜂王种群(作为近亲繁殖的阳性对照)和三个独立的商业管理种群的工蜂后代的微卫星分析,比较了推断出的蜂王及其配偶的基因型。然后,我们比较了所有雄蜂与每个蜂王(配偶)交配的亲缘关系,每个种群中的所有蜂王(女王-女王),每个蜂王与她的每个配偶(女王-配偶),以及每个种群中的所有雄蜂(雄蜂-雄蜂)。我们发现,正如预期的那样,异交群体的遗传相似性水平最低,而近交群体的遗传相似性水平最高。管理的蜜蜂群体之间的遗传相似性水平是中等的,但更接近于近亲繁殖的群体。整个繁殖种群的遗传结构产生了两个主要的亚种群,可能来自东海岸和西海岸的育种者。讨论了这些发现对管理蜜蜂总体种群遗传多样性的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Meta-analysis of genetic diversity and intercolony relatedness among reproductives in commercial honey bee populations
Honey bee colonies are large kin groups, each with a single mother queen and thousands of female workers. Queen bees are highly polyandrous, each mating with an average of approximately 12 drones from other colonies. We used a meta-analysis approach to compare the pedigree relationships of honey bee reproductives (queens and their mates) across five different studies and to quantify the overall genetic diversity of breeding populations. We compared the inferred genotypes of queens and their mates from microsatellite analyses of worker offspring from a feral Africanized honey bee population (which served as a negative control for inbreeding), an experimentally derived population of sister queens (which served as a positive control for inbreeding), and three separate commercially managed populations. We then compared the relatedness of all drones mated to each queen (mate-mate), all queens within each population (queen-queen), each queen with each of her mates (queen-mate), and all drones within each population (drone-drone). We found, as expected, the lowest levels of genetic similarity in the outcrossed population and highest levels of genetic similarity in the inbred population. Levels of genetic similarity among the managed honey bee populations were intermediate but closer to that of the inbred population. Genetic structuring of the entire breeding population resulted in two major subpopulations, likely deriving from breeders on the east and west coast. The effects that these findings have on the overall population genetic diversity of managed honey bees is discussed.
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