生态位和种群历史塑造了加勒比海三个岛屿上的蚊子种群遗传学。

IF 3 2区 医学 Q1 PARASITOLOGY
Pepijn Helleman, Maarten Schrama, Krijn B Trimbos, Marieta A H Braks, Francis Schaffner, Arjan Stroo, Roel M Wouters, Jordy G van der Beek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:虽然蚊子种群遗传学的研究主要集中在与医学相关的物种上,但很少有研究在单一地理区域内来自不同物种的蚊子的遗传种群结构。本地和非本地物种之间的有限比较,以及来自同一地区的生态不同物种之间的比较,阻碍了我们概括以前描述的蚊子种群遗传学模式的能力。本研究以加勒比海阿鲁巴岛、库拉帕拉索岛和博内尔岛的蚊子动物群为例,探讨了本地和非本地蚊子物种之间以及占据不同生态位的本地物种之间的种群遗传变异。我们研究了遗传模式如何与它们的种群历史和物种特异性生态相关。方法:对3个岛屿6种258份蚊虫标本进行线粒体COII序列分析。采用单倍型网络分析方法,对6种生态多样性蚊种的种群历史和生态位差异进行了遗传变异分析。结果:不同种群间的遗传多样性和种群遗传结构均存在较大差异,可将其划分为3个类群:(1)遗传多样性较低的非本地物种,(2)不同岛屿上具有高遗传多样性和密切相关单倍型的本地物种,(3)具有高遗传多样性和局部限制单倍型的本地物种。结论:本研究结果表明,外来种与本土种的种群遗传存在较大差异,这可能与种群历史有关。此外,同一区域的蚊虫种群遗传结构可能存在差异,这可能与其生态和传播能力的差异有关。我们认为,在一个区域内研究更广泛的物种将有利于未来的蚊子种群遗传学研究,将观察到的模式置于更广泛的历史、生态和进化背景中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The ecological niche and population history shape mosquito population genetics on a group of three Caribbean islands.

Background: While studies on mosquito population genetics have primarily focused on medically relevant species, fewer have examined the genetic population structure of mosquitoes from a diverse range of species within a single geographical area. The limited comparison between native and non-native species, as well as ecologically divergent species from the same region, hampers our ability to generalise previously described patterns in mosquito population genetics. This study uses the mosquito fauna of the Caribbean islands of Aruba, Curaçao and Bonaire as a case study to explore population genetic variation among both native and non-native mosquito species, as well as among native species occupying different ecological niches. We examine how genetic patterns relate to their population history and species-specific ecologies.

Methods: Mitochondrial COII sequences were obtained from 258 mosquito specimens belonging to six species, occurring on all three islands. Sequences were used in haplotype network analysis to assess the genetic variation between mosquito populations of each of the six ecologically diverse species, which vary in both their population history and ecological niche.

Results: Both the genetic diversity and population genetic structure were found to differ strongly between sets of species, leading to a subdivision into three species groups: (1) non-native species with low genetic diversity across all three investigated islands, (2) locally native species with high genetic diversity and closely related haplotypes occurring on different islands and (3) locally native species with high genetic diversity and locally restricted haplotypes.

Conclusions: Our results show that the population genetics of non-native and native species strongly differ, likely as a result of population history. Furthermore, the results suggest that mosquito species sharing the same area may display distinct population genetic structure, likely related to differences in their ecology and dispersal capacity. We suggest that addressing a broader range of species within a single area will benefit future research on mosquito population genetics to place observed patterns into a broader historical, ecological and evolutionary context.

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来源期刊
Parasites & Vectors
Parasites & Vectors 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
9.40%
发文量
433
审稿时长
1.4 months
期刊介绍: Parasites & Vectors is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal dealing with the biology of parasites, parasitic diseases, intermediate hosts, vectors and vector-borne pathogens. Manuscripts published in this journal will be available to all worldwide, with no barriers to access, immediately following acceptance. However, authors retain the copyright of their material and may use it, or distribute it, as they wish. Manuscripts on all aspects of the basic and applied biology of parasites, intermediate hosts, vectors and vector-borne pathogens will be considered. In addition to the traditional and well-established areas of science in these fields, we also aim to provide a vehicle for publication of the rapidly developing resources and technology in parasite, intermediate host and vector genomics and their impacts on biological research. We are able to publish large datasets and extensive results, frequently associated with genomic and post-genomic technologies, which are not readily accommodated in traditional journals. Manuscripts addressing broader issues, for example economics, social sciences and global climate change in relation to parasites, vectors and disease control, are also welcomed.
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