Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Centro de Estudos de Insetos Sociais, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil.
Mol Ecol. 2017 Dec;26(24):6921-6937. doi: 10.1111/mec.14431. Epub 2017 Dec 2.
Leafcutter ants propagate co-evolving fungi for food. The nearly 50 species of leafcutter ants (Atta, Acromyrmex) range from Argentina to the United States, with the greatest species diversity in southern South America. We elucidate the biogeography of fungi cultivated by leafcutter ants using DNA sequence and microsatellite-marker analyses of 474 cultivars collected across the leafcutter range. Fungal cultivars belong to two clades (Clade-A and Clade-B). The dominant and widespread Clade-A cultivars form three genotype clusters, with their relative prevalence corresponding to southern South America, northern South America, Central and North America. Admixture between Clade-A populations supports genetic exchange within a single species, Leucocoprinus gongylophorus. Some leafcutter species that cut grass as fungicultural substrate are specialized to cultivate Clade-B fungi, whereas leafcutters preferring dicot plants appear specialized on Clade-A fungi. Cultivar sharing between sympatric leafcutter species occurs frequently such that cultivars of Atta are not distinct from those of Acromyrmex. Leafcutters specialized on Clade-B fungi occur only in South America. Diversity of Clade-A fungi is greatest in South America, but minimal in Central and North America. Maximum cultivar diversity in South America is predicted by the Kusnezov-Fowler hypothesis that leafcutter ants originated in subtropical South America and only dicot-specialized leafcutter ants migrated out of South America, but the cultivar diversity becomes also compatible with a recently proposed hypothesis of a Central American origin by postulating that leafcutter ants acquired novel cultivars many times from other nonleafcutter fungus-growing ants during their migrations from Central America across South America. We evaluate these biogeographic hypotheses in the light of estimated dates for the origins of leafcutter ants and their cultivars.
切叶蚁为了食物而培育共生真菌。近 50 种切叶蚁(Atta、Acromyrmex)分布于阿根廷至美国,其物种多样性在南美洲南部最为丰富。我们通过对分布于切叶蚁范围内的 474 个栽培品种的 DNA 序列和微卫星标记分析,阐明了切叶蚁所培育真菌的生物地理学。真菌栽培品种属于两个分支(分支 A 和分支 B)。占主导地位且分布广泛的分支 A 栽培品种形成三个基因型群,其相对流行程度与南美洲南部、北部、中美洲和北美洲相对应。分支 A 种群之间的杂种支持了同种内的基因交流,即 Leucocoprinus gongylophorus。一些以草为菌基的切叶蚁物种专门培育分支 B 真菌,而偏好双子叶植物的切叶蚁似乎专门培育分支 A 真菌。同域共生的切叶蚁物种之间经常发生栽培品种共享,以至于 Atta 的栽培品种与 Acromyrmex 的栽培品种没有区别。专门培育分支 B 真菌的切叶蚁仅存在于南美洲。分支 A 真菌的多样性在南美洲最大,但在中美洲和北美洲最小。南美洲的最大栽培品种多样性由 Kusnezov-Fowler 假说预测,即切叶蚁起源于亚热带南美洲,只有专门以双子叶植物为食的切叶蚁从南美洲迁徙出去,但该栽培品种的多样性也与最近提出的中美洲起源假说相兼容,即切叶蚁在从中美洲迁徙穿越南美洲的过程中,多次从其他非切叶蚁菌生蚁中获得了新的栽培品种。我们根据切叶蚁及其栽培品种的起源估计日期,评估了这些生物地理学假说。