经由不列颠群岛的北芬诺斯坎迪亚:冬蛾在冰期后重新定居的新路线的证据

Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
J. Andersen, N. Havill, Brian P. Griffin, J. U. Jepsen, S. Hagen, T. Klemola, I. Barrio, Sofie A. Kjeldgaard, T. Høye, J. Murlis, Y. Baranchikov, A. Selikhovkin, O. P. Vindstad, A. Caccone, J. Elkinton
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引用次数: 1

摘要

全球范围内,鼠疫昆虫爆发的频率和严重程度正在增加,这可能是人类介导的非本土生物引入的结果。然而,疫情爆发是最近引入进化上幼稚的种群的结果,还是最近对先前在自然范围扩大期间到达的现有种群的干扰,并不总是显而易见的。在这里,我们使用近似贝叶斯计算来推断一种害虫,即冬蛾Operoptera brumata L.(鳞翅目:地蛾科)的定殖历史,它在北芬诺斯坎迪亚造成了广泛的落叶。我们使用一组24个微卫星基因座生成了基因型,发现北欧的冬蛾种群可以分为五个基因不同的类群,分别对应于1)冰岛、2)不列颠群岛、3)中欧和芬诺斯坎迪亚南部、4)东欧和5)芬诺斯坎迪亚北部。我们发现,北芬诺斯坎迪亚冬蛾群与目前在不列颠群岛发现的种群关系最为密切,这些种群可能在2900年前分化。这一结果表明,目前的疫情并不是最近引入的结果,而是最近的气候或栖息地干扰正在影响现有的种群,这些种群可能是通过前罗马时期的不列颠群岛贸易商抵达芬诺斯坎迪亚北部的,和/或通过北海的自然扩散,可能在扩散到挪威海岸之前,将苏格兰北部的奥克尼群岛作为垫脚石。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Northern Fennoscandia via the British Isles: evidence for a novel post-glacial recolonization route by winter moth (Operophtera brumata)
The frequency and severity of outbreaks by pestiferous insects is increasing globally, likely as a result of human-mediated introductions of non-native organisms. However, it is not always apparent whether an outbreak is the result of a recent introduction of an evolutionarily naive population, or of recent disturbance acting on an existing population that arrived previously during natural range expansion.  Here we use approximate Bayesian computation to infer the colonization history of a pestiferous insect, the winter moth, Operophtera brumata L. (Lepidoptera: Geometridae), which has caused widespread defoliation in northern Fennoscandia. We generated genotypes using a suite of 24 microsatellite loci and find that populations of winter moth in northern Europe can be assigned to five genetically distinct clusters that correspond with 1) Iceland, 2) the British Isles, 3) Central Europe and southern Fennoscandia, 4) Eastern Europe, and 5) northern Fennoscandia. We find that the northern Fennoscandia winter moth cluster is most closely related to a population presently found in the British Isles, and that these populations likely diverged around 2,900 years ago. This result suggests that current outbreaks are not the result of a recent introduction, but rather that recent climate or habitat disturbance is acting on existing populations that may have arrived to northern Fennoscandia via pre-Roman traders from the British Isles, and/or by natural dispersal across the North Sea likely using the Orkney Islands of northern Scotland as a stepping-stone before dispersing up the Norwegian coast.
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来源期刊
Frontiers of Biogeography
Frontiers of Biogeography Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers of Biogeography is the scientific magazine of the International Biogeography Society (http://www.biogeography.org/). Our scope includes news, original research letters, reviews, opinions and perspectives, news, commentaries, interviews, and articles on how to teach, disseminate and/or apply biogeographical knowledge. We accept papers on the study of the geographical variations of life at all levels of organization, including also studies on temporal and/or evolutionary variations in any component of biodiversity if they have a geographical perspective, as well as studies at relatively small scales if they have a spatially explicit component.
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