红木蚁群(膜翅目:红木蚁科)的分子分类:瑞士阿尔卑斯地区一新种?

IF 3.8 1区 农林科学 Q1 ENTOMOLOGY Myrmecological News Pub Date : 2011-01-31 DOI:10.5281/ZENODO.11881
C. Bernasconi, D. Cherix, B. Seifert, P. Pamilo
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引用次数: 39

摘要

由于对森林生态系统的有益影响,欧洲红木蚁在许多欧洲国家受到法律保护,被认为是森林稳定性最可靠的生物指标之一。然而,它们的分类一直有很多争论,不幸的是,它经常被忽视。这主要是因为基于形态学的物种划分方法需要大量的时间和经验。因此,我们利用9个微卫星位点和线粒体DNA (COI基因)来验证遗传标记对红木蚁物种划分的能力,并研究瑞士东部阿尔卑斯地区红木蚁的隐性多样性。我们分析了瑞士国家公园地区所有红木蚁种类的83个巢穴。遗传数据表明,这些物种代表着不同的基因库。此外,结果表明,Formica aquilonia YARROW, 1955和f.p alagubris SEIFERT, 1996经常在公园内杂交,证实这两个物种在遗传上非常接近,可能是最近才分化的。然而,微卫星还显示,位于明格山谷的一个完整的种群,在形态上被确定为F. lugubris ZETTERSTEDT, 1838年,与同一地区发现的所有其他分析的F. lugubris种群以及其他红木蚁物种在遗传上不同。这些发现得到了线粒体DNA分析的证实,表明在瑞士东部阿尔卑斯地区存在一种新的神秘物种。这个假定的隐种暂时命名为F. lugubris-A2。这些结果对今后的保护规划、监测和进化研究具有重要意义。
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Molecular taxonomy of the Formica rufa group (red wood ants) (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): a new cryptic species in the Swiss Alps?
Because of their beneficial impact on forest ecosystems, European red wood ants (Formica rufa group) are protected by law in many European countries and are considered to be among the most reliable bioindicators of forest stability. However, their taxonomy has been much debated and, unfortunately, it is too often neglected. This happens mainly because the morphology-based method for species delimitation requires lots of time and experience. We therefore employed 9 microsatellite loci and mitochondrial DNA (COI gene) to verify the power of genetic markers for red wood ant species delimitation and to investigate the cryptic diversity of these ants within the Eastern Swiss Alps. We analyzed 83 nests belonging to all red wood ant species that occur in the Swiss National Park area. Genetic data indicated that these species represent different genetic pools. Moreover, results showed that Formica aquilonia YARROW, 1955 and F. paralugubris SEIFERT, 1996 often hybridize within the Park, confirming that these two species are genetically very close and could have diverged only recently. Nevertheless, microsatellites also revealed that one entire population, located in the Minger Valley and morphologically identified as F. lugubris ZETTERSTEDT, 1838, is genetically different to all other analyzed F. lugubris populations found within the same area and to other red wood ant species. These findings, confirmed by mitochondrial DNA analyses, suggest the existence of a new cryptic species within the Eastern Swiss Alps. This putative cryptic species has been provisionally named F. lugubris-A2. These results have a great importance for future conservation plans, monitoring and evolutionary studies on these protected ants.
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来源期刊
Myrmecological News
Myrmecological News ENTOMOLOGY-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
4.90%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Taxonomic manuscripts with isolated species descriptions are generally discouraged, especially for genera with large numbers of undescribed species; it lies at the discretion of the editorial team whether such manuscripts are considered. Papers on new distribution records will be considered if the new records are sufficiently important or unexpected from a biogeographical perspective. Such papers could, for example, discuss relevant biological/ecological data and/or biogeographical implications such as analysis by species-distribution modelling. In detail, research areas covered by Myrmecological News include: behaviour; biogeography and faunistics; biological-pest control; chemical ecology; climate-change biology; cognition and learning; comparative and functional morphology; community ecology; conservation biology and bioindication; cytogenetics; ecology and evolution of (endo)symbioses; ecosystem (dis)services; foraging strategies; fossils; fragmentation ecology; genomics; histology; immune research; (integrative) taxonomy; interspecific hybridisation; invasion biology; life-history research; methodology in community quantification; national checklists; neurobiology; niche ecology; orientation and navigation; phenology; phylogeny and phylogeography; population genetics; sensory physiology; social evolution; social parasitism; sociogenomics; stable isotopes; tools for routine identification.
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