Henriques Dora, Chávez-Galarza Julio, Teixeira Juliana S G, Ferreira Helena, Neves Cátia J, Francoy Tiago M, Pinto M Alice
Centro de Investigação de Montanha (CIMO), Instituto Politécnico de Bragança, Campus de Sta. Apolónia, 5300-253 Bragança, Portugal.
Escola de Agronomia, Universidad Nacional de Cañete, Urb. Rosa de Hualcará, Calle Canal Maria Angola s/n, San Vicente de Cañete, Lima 15701, Perú.
Insects. 2020 Jan 30;11(2):89. doi: 10.3390/insects11020089.
Wing geometric morphometrics has been applied to honey bees () in identification of evolutionary lineages or subspecies and, to a lesser extent, in assessing genetic structure within subspecies. Due to bias in the production of sterile females (workers) in a colony, most studies have used workers leaving the males (drones) as a neglected group. However, considering their importance as reproductive individuals, the use of drones should be incorporated in these analyses in order to better understand diversity patterns and underlying evolutionary processes. Here, we assessed the usefulness of drone wings, as well as the power of wing geometric morphometrics, in capturing the signature of complex evolutionary processes by examining wing shape data, integrated with geographical information, from 711 colonies sampled across the entire distributional range of in Iberia. We compared the genetic patterns reconstructed from spatially-explicit shape variation extracted from wings of both sexes with that previously reported using 383 genome-wide SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms). Our results indicate that the spatial structure retrieved from wings of drones and workers was similar (r = 0.93) and congruent with that inferred from SNPs (r = 0.90 for drones; r = 0.87 for workers), corroborating the clinal pattern that has been described for using other genetic markers. In addition to showing that drone wings carry valuable genetic information, this study highlights the capability of wing geometric morphometrics in capturing complex genetic patterns, offering a reliable and low-cost alternative for preliminary estimation of population structure.
翅几何形态测量学已应用于蜜蜂,用于识别进化谱系或亚种,在较小程度上也用于评估亚种内的遗传结构。由于蜂群中不育雌性(工蜂)的产生存在偏差,大多数研究使用离开蜂群的雄性(雄蜂)作为被忽视的群体。然而,考虑到雄蜂作为繁殖个体的重要性,应将雄蜂纳入这些分析中,以便更好地理解多样性模式和潜在的进化过程。在这里,我们通过检查来自伊比利亚半岛整个分布范围内711个蜂群的翅形数据(与地理信息相结合),评估了雄蜂翅的有用性以及翅几何形态测量学在捕捉复杂进化过程特征方面的能力。我们将从两性翅中提取的空间明确形状变异重建的遗传模式与先前使用383个全基因组单核苷酸多态性(SNP)报道的模式进行了比较。我们的结果表明,从雄蜂和工蜂翅中检索到的空间结构相似(r = 0.93),并且与从SNP推断的结构一致(雄蜂r = 0.90;工蜂r = 0.87),证实了使用其他遗传标记描述的渐变模式。除了表明雄蜂翅携带宝贵的遗传信息外,本研究还强调了翅几何形态测量学捕捉复杂遗传模式的能力,为种群结构的初步估计提供了一种可靠且低成本的替代方法。