Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, M3J 1P3, Ontario, Canada.
Mol Ecol. 2013 Jun;22(12):3211-5. doi: 10.1111/mec.12332. Epub 2013 May 9.
De la Rúa et al. (2013) express some concerns about the conclusions of our recent study showing that management increases genetic diversity of honey bees (Apis mellifera) by promoting admixture (Harpur et al. 2012). We provide a brief review of the literature on the population genetics of A. mellifera and show that we utilized appropriate sampling methods to estimate genetic diversity in the focal populations. Our finding of higher genetic diversity in two managed A. mellifera populations on two different continents is expected to be the norm given the large number of studies documenting admixture in honey bees. Our study focused on elucidating how management affects genetic diversity in honey bees, not on how to best manage bee colonies. We do not endorse the intentional admixture of honey bee populations, and we agree with De la Rúa et al. (2013) that native honey bee subspecies should be conserved.
德拉鲁阿等人(2013)对我们最近的研究结论表示了一些担忧,该研究表明,管理通过促进杂交(Harpur 等人,2012)来增加蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)的遗传多样性。我们简要回顾了有关 A. mellifera 群体遗传学的文献,并表明我们利用了适当的抽样方法来估计焦点种群中的遗传多样性。鉴于有大量研究记录了蜜蜂的杂交现象,我们发现两个不同大陆上的两个管理蜜蜂种群具有更高的遗传多样性是预期的常态。我们的研究重点是阐明管理如何影响蜜蜂的遗传多样性,而不是如何最好地管理蜜蜂群体。我们不支持故意混合蜜蜂种群,我们同意德拉鲁阿等人(2013)的观点,即应该保护本地蜜蜂亚种。