INRA, UMR CBGP, INRA/IRD/Cirad/Montpellier SupAgro, Montferrier-sur-Lez, France.
Mol Ecol. 2009 Dec;18(24):5059-73. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2009.04440.x. Epub 2009 Nov 20.
The invasive ant species Wasmannia auropunctata displays both ecologically dominant and non-dominant populations within its native range. Three factors could theoretically explain the ecological dominance of some native populations of W. auropunctata: (i) its clonal reproductive system, through demographic and/or adaptive advantages; (ii) its unicolonial social organization, through lower intraspecific and efficient interspecific competition; (iii) the human disturbance of its native range, through the modification of biotic and abiotic environmental conditions. We used microsatellite markers and behavioural tests to uncover the reproductive modes and social organization of dominant and non-dominant native populations in natural and human-modified habitats. Microsatellite and mtDNA data indicated that dominant and non-dominant native populations (supercolonies as determined by aggression tests) of W. auropunctata did not belong to different evolutionary units. We found that the reproductive system and the social organization are neither necessary nor sufficient to explain W. auropunctata ecological dominance. Dominance rather seems to be set off by unknown ecological factors altered by human activities, as all dominant populations were recorded in human-modified habitats. The clonal reproductive system found in some populations of W. auropunctata may however indirectly contribute to its ecological dominance by allowing the species to expand its environmental niche, through the fixation over time of specific combinations of divergent male and female genotypes. Unicoloniality may rather promote the range expansion of already dominant populations than actually trigger ecological dominance. The W. auropunctata model illustrates the strong impact of human disturbance on species' ecological features and the adaptive potential of clonal reproductive systems.
入侵蚁种 Wasmannia auropunctata 在其原生范围内既有生态优势种群,也有非优势种群。有三个因素理论上可以解释一些原生 W. auropunctata 种群的生态优势:(i)其克隆繁殖系统,通过在人口和/或适应性方面的优势;(ii)其单巢社会结构,通过降低种内和有效的种间竞争;(iii)人类对其原生范围的干扰,通过改变生物和非生物环境条件。我们使用微卫星标记和行为测试来揭示在自然和人为改变的栖息地中优势和非优势原生种群的繁殖模式和社会组织。微卫星和 mtDNA 数据表明,优势和非优势原生种群(通过攻击性测试确定的超级殖民地)的 W. auropunctata 不属于不同的进化单位。我们发现,繁殖系统和社会组织既不是解释 W. auropunctata 生态优势的必要条件,也不是充分条件。优势似乎是由人类活动改变的未知生态因素引起的,因为所有的优势种群都记录在人为改变的栖息地中。在一些 W. auropunctata 种群中发现的克隆繁殖系统可能通过随着时间的推移固定特定的雄性和雌性基因型的发散组合,间接地有助于其生态优势,从而允许物种扩大其环境生态位。单巢性可能更有利于已经占优势的种群的扩张,而不是真正引发生态优势。W. auropunctata 模型说明了人类干扰对物种生态特征和克隆繁殖系统的适应潜力的强烈影响。