Pest and Environmental Adaptation Research Group, School of BioSciences, Bio21 Institute, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Australian Institute of Tropical Health and Medicine, James Cook University, Cairns, QLD, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Mar;30(5):1174-1189. doi: 10.1111/mec.15792. Epub 2021 Jan 24.
Population genomic approaches can characterize dispersal across a single generation through to many generations in the past, bridging the gap between individual movement and intergenerational gene flow. These approaches are particularly useful when investigating dispersal in recently altered systems, where they provide a way of inferring long-distance dispersal between newly established populations and their interactions with existing populations. Human-mediated biological invasions represent such altered systems which can be investigated with appropriate study designs and analyses. Here we apply temporally restricted sampling and a range of population genomic approaches to investigate dispersal in a 2004 invasion of Aedes albopictus (the Asian tiger mosquito) in the Torres Strait Islands (TSI) of Australia. We sampled mosquitoes from 13 TSI villages simultaneously and genotyped 373 mosquitoes at genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs): 331 from the TSI, 36 from Papua New Guinea (PNG) and four incursive mosquitoes detected in uninvaded regions. Within villages, spatial genetic structure varied substantially but overall displayed isolation by distance and a neighbourhood size of 232-577. Close kin dyads revealed recent movement between islands 31-203 km apart, and deep learning inferences showed incursive Ae. albopictus had travelled to uninvaded regions from both adjacent and nonadjacent islands. Private alleles and a co-ancestry matrix indicated direct gene flow from PNG into nearby islands. Outlier analyses also detected four linked alleles introgressed from PNG, with the alleles surrounding 12 resistance-associated cytochrome P450 genes. By treating dispersal as both an intergenerational process and a set of discrete events, we describe a highly interconnected invasive system.
人口基因组学方法可以描述单个世代到过去多个世代的扩散情况,弥合了个体运动和代际基因流动之间的差距。这些方法在研究最近发生变化的系统中的扩散时特别有用,因为它们提供了一种推断新建立的种群之间的长距离扩散及其与现有种群相互作用的方法。人为介导的生物入侵就是这样一个改变了的系统,可以通过适当的研究设计和分析来研究。在这里,我们应用时间限制采样和一系列群体基因组学方法来研究澳大利亚托雷斯海峡群岛(TSI)2004 年白纹伊蚊(亚洲虎蚊)入侵的扩散情况。我们同时从 TSI 的 13 个村庄中采集蚊子,并对 373 只蚊子进行全基因组单核苷酸多态性(SNP)基因分型:331 只来自 TSI,36 只来自巴布亚新几内亚(PNG),还有 4 只在未受入侵地区发现的入侵蚊子。在村庄内,空间遗传结构差异很大,但总体上表现出距离隔离和 232-577 的邻居大小。近亲对揭示了近期在相距 31-203 公里的岛屿之间的移动,深度学习推断表明,入侵的白纹伊蚊已经从相邻和非相邻岛屿到达未受入侵的地区。特有等位基因和共同祖先矩阵表明,来自 PNG 的直接基因流进入了附近的岛屿。连锁分析还检测到从 PNG 传入的四个连锁等位基因,这些等位基因围绕着 12 个与细胞色素 P450 基因相关的抗性基因。通过将扩散既视为代际过程又视为一系列离散事件,我们描述了一个高度互联的入侵系统。