Inferring long-term and short-term determinants of genetic diversity in honey bees: Beekeeping impact and conservation strategies

Thibault Leroy, Pierre Faux, Benjamin Basso, Sonia Eynard, David Wragg, Alain Vignal
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Abstract

Bees are vital pollinators in natural and agricultural landscapes around the globe, playing a key role in maintaining flowering plant biodiversity and ensuring food security. Among the honey bee species, the Western honey bee (Apis mellifera) is particularly significant, not only for its extensive crop pollination services but also for producing economically valuable products such as honey. Here, we analyzed whole-genome sequence data from four Apis species to explore how honey bee evolution has shaped current diversity patterns. Using Approximate Bayesian Computation, we first reconstructed the demographic history of A. mellifera in Europe, finding support for postglacial secondary contacts, therefore predating human-mediated transfers linked to modern beekeeping. However, our analysis of recent demographic changes then reveals significant bottlenecks due to beekeeping practices, which have notably affected genetic diversity. Black honey bee populations from conservatories, particularly those on islands, exhibit considerable genetic loss, raising concerns about the long-term effectiveness of current conservation strategies. Additionally, we observed a high degree of conservation in the genomic landscapes of nucleotide diversity across the four species, despite a divergence gradient spanning over 15 million years, consistent with a long-term conservation of the recombination landscapes. Taken together, our results provide the most comprehensive assessment of diversity patterns in honey bees to date and offer insights into the optimal management of resources to ensure the long-term persistence of honey bees and their invaluable pollination services.
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推断蜜蜂遗传多样性的长期和短期决定因素:养蜂业的影响和保护战略
蜜蜂是全球自然和农业景观中重要的授粉者,在维持开花植物的生物多样性和确保粮食安全方面发挥着关键作用。在蜜蜂物种中,西方蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)尤为重要,它不仅为农作物提供广泛的授粉服务,还生产蜂蜜等具有经济价值的产品。在这里,我们分析了来自四个蜜蜂物种的全基因组序列数据,以探索蜜蜂进化如何塑造了当前的多样性模式。利用近似贝叶斯计算方法,我们首先重建了欧洲蜜蜂(A. mellifera)的种群历史,发现支持冰川期后的二次接触,因此早于与现代养蜂业相关的人类媒介转移。然而,我们对近期人口变化的分析表明,养蜂业造成了显著的瓶颈,对遗传多样性产生了明显影响。来自保护区的黑蜜蜂种群,尤其是那些位于岛屿上的种群,表现出相当严重的遗传损失,这引起了人们对当前保护策略长期有效性的担忧。此外,我们观察到四个物种的核苷酸多样性在基因组景观上的高度保护,尽管其分化梯度跨越了1500万年,这与重组景观的长期保护是一致的。总之,我们的研究结果提供了迄今为止对蜜蜂多样性模式最全面的评估,为优化资源管理以确保蜜蜂的长期存在及其宝贵的授粉服务提供了启示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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