Wu Yunke, Molongoski John J, Winograd Deborah F, Bogdanowicz Steven M, Louyakis Artemis S, Lance David R, Mastro Victor C, Harrison Richard G
Otis CPHST Lab, Joint Base Cape Cod, United States Department of Agriculture, 1398 West Truck Road, Buzzards Bay, MA, 02542, USA; Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Corson Hall, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2015 Mar;24(6):1275-91. doi: 10.1111/mec.13103. Epub 2015 Mar 6.
Characterizing the current population structure of potentially invasive species provides a critical context for identifying source populations and for understanding why invasions are successful. Non-native populations inevitably lose genetic diversity during initial colonization events, but subsequent admixture among independently introduced lineages may increase both genetic variation and adaptive potential. Here we characterize the population structure of the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar Linnaeus), one of the world's most destructive forest pests. Native to Eurasia and recently introduced to North America, the current distribution of gypsy moth includes forests throughout the temperate region of the northern hemisphere. Analyses of microsatellite loci and mitochondrial DNA sequences for 1738 individuals identified four genetic clusters within L. dispar. Three of these clusters correspond to the three named subspecies; North American populations represent a distinct fourth cluster, presumably a consequence of the population bottleneck and allele frequency change that accompanied introduction. We find no evidence that admixture has been an important catalyst of the successful invasion and range expansion in North America. However, we do find evidence of ongoing hybridization between subspecies and increased genetic variation in gypsy moth populations from Eastern Asia, populations that now pose a threat of further human-mediated introductions. Finally, we show that current patterns of variation can be explained in terms of climate and habitat changes during the Pleistocene, a time when temperate forests expanded and contracted. Deeply diverged matrilines in Europe imply that gypsy moths have been there for a long time and are not recent arrivals from Asia.
描述潜在入侵物种当前的种群结构,对于识别源种群以及理解入侵为何成功提供了关键背景。非本地种群在初始定殖事件中不可避免地会丧失遗传多样性,但随后独立引入的谱系之间的混合可能会增加遗传变异和适应潜力。在此,我们描述了舞毒蛾(Lymantria dispar Linnaeus)的种群结构,它是世界上最具破坏力的森林害虫之一。舞毒蛾原产于欧亚大陆,最近被引入北美洲,其目前的分布范围包括北半球温带地区的森林。对1738个个体的微卫星位点和线粒体DNA序列进行分析,在舞毒蛾中识别出四个遗传簇。其中三个簇对应于三个已命名的亚种;北美种群代表一个独特的第四簇,推测这是引入过程中伴随的种群瓶颈和等位基因频率变化的结果。我们没有发现混合是北美成功入侵和范围扩张的重要催化剂的证据。然而,我们确实发现了亚种之间正在进行杂交的证据,以及东亚舞毒蛾种群遗传变异增加的证据,这些种群现在构成了进一步人为引入的威胁。最后,我们表明,当前变异模式可以用更新世期间的气候和栖息地变化来解释,在那个时期,温带森林扩张和收缩。欧洲深度分化的母系谱系意味着舞毒蛾在那里已经存在了很长时间,并非近期从亚洲迁入。