School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2013 Sep;68(3):582-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2013.04.015. Epub 2013 Apr 28.
Although bees form a key pollinator suite for flowering plants, very few studies have examined the evolutionary radiation of non-domesticated bees over human time-scales. This is surprising given the importance of bees for crop pollination and the effect of humans in transforming ecosystems via agriculture. In the Pacific, where the bee fauna appears depauperate, their importance as pollinators is not clear, particularly in Fiji where species diversity is even lower than neighbouring archipelagos. Here we explore the radiation of halictine bees in Fiji using phylogenetic analyses of mtDNA COI sequence data. Our analyses indicate the existence of several 'deep' clades whose divergences are close to the crown node, along with a highly derived 'broom' clade showing very high haplotype diversity, and mostly limited to low-lying agricultural regions. This derived clade is very abundant, whereas the more basal clades were relatively rare. Although nearly all haplotype diversity in Fijian Homalictus comprises synonymous substitutions, a small number of amino acid changes are associated with the major clades, including the hyper-diverse clade. Analyses of haplotype lineage accumulation show a steep increase in selectively neutral COI haplotypes corresponding to the emergence of this 'broom' clade. We explore three possible scenarios for this dramatic increase: (i) a key change in adaptedness to the environment, (ii) a large-scale extinction event, or (iii) a dramatic increase in suitable habitats leading to rapid population expansion. Using estimated mutation rates of mitochondrial DNA in other invertebrates, we argue that Homalictus first colonised the Fijian archipelago in the middle-late Pleistocene, and the rapid accumulation of haplotypes in the hyper-diverse clade occurred in the Holocene, but prior to recorded human presence in the Fijian region. Our results indicate that bees have not been important pollinators of Fijian ecosystems until very recent times. Post-Pleistocene climate change and anthropogenic effects on Fijian ecosystems are likely to have greatly transformed pollinator suites from the conditions when those ecosystems were first being assembled.
尽管蜜蜂是开花植物的主要传粉媒介之一,但很少有研究考察过非驯化蜜蜂在人类时间尺度上的进化辐射。考虑到蜜蜂对作物传粉的重要性以及人类通过农业改变生态系统的影响,这令人惊讶。在太平洋地区,蜜蜂动物群似乎匮乏,它们作为传粉媒介的重要性尚不清楚,特别是在斐济,那里的物种多样性甚至低于邻近的群岛。在这里,我们使用 mtDNA COI 序列数据分析探讨了斐济地熊蜂的辐射。我们的分析表明,存在几个“深”分支,其分歧接近于冠节点,以及一个高度衍生的“扫帚”分支,显示出非常高的单倍型多样性,并且主要局限于低地农业区。这个衍生的分支非常丰富,而更基础的分支则相对较少。尽管斐济霍马利库斯的几乎所有单倍型多样性都由同义替换组成,但少数氨基酸变化与主要分支有关,包括高度多样化的分支。单倍型谱系积累分析显示,与这个“扫帚”分支出现相对应的,选择性中性 COI 单倍型急剧增加。我们探讨了这种急剧增加的三种可能情况:(i)对环境适应性的关键变化,(ii)大规模灭绝事件,或(iii)适宜栖息地的急剧增加导致快速的种群扩张。使用其他无脊椎动物中线粒体 DNA 的估计突变率,我们认为霍马利库斯在更新世中晚期首次殖民斐济群岛,而在高度多样化的分支中,单倍型的快速积累发生在全新世,但在人类有记录地出现在斐济地区之前。我们的结果表明,直到最近,蜜蜂才成为斐济生态系统的重要传粉媒介。更新世后气候变化和人类对斐济生态系统的影响可能极大地改变了从这些生态系统最初组装时的传粉媒介组合。