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The origins of global invasions of the German wasp (Vespula germanica) and its infection with four honey bee viruses
Resumen
A successful control or eradication programme using biological control or genetically-mediated methods requires knowledge of the origin and the extent of wasp genetic diversity. Mitochondrial DNA variation in the native and invaded range of the social wasp Vespula germanica was used to examine intraspecific genetic variation and invasive source populations. We also examined wasps for the presence of four viruses found in honey bees: Acute bee paralysis
[ver mas...]
A successful control or eradication programme using biological control or genetically-mediated methods requires knowledge of the origin and the extent of wasp genetic diversity. Mitochondrial DNA variation in the native and invaded range of the social wasp Vespula germanica was used to examine intraspecific genetic variation and invasive source populations. We also examined wasps for the presence of four viruses found in honey bees: Acute bee paralysis virus, Deformed wing virus, Israeli acute paralysis virus and
Kashmir bee virus. German wasps showed reduced genetic diversity in the invaded range compared to that of their native range. Populations in the introduced range are likely to have arrived from different source populations. All four viral honey bee pathogens were found in V. germanica, although they varied in their distribution and strain. Multiple introductions of German wasps have occurred for most invaded regions, though some populations are genetically homogenous. The differing locations of origin will guide researchers searching for biocontrol agents and the reduced genetic diversity may make these wasps a potentially viable target for control via gene drives.
[Cerrar]
Autor
Brenton-Rule, Evan C.;
Dobelmann, Jana;
Baty, James W.;
Brown, Robert L.;
Dvorak, Libor;
Grangier, Julien;
Masciocchi, Maite;
McGrannachan, Chris;
Shortall, Chris R.;
Schmack, Julia;
van Zyl, Carolien;
Veldtman, Ruan;
Lester, Philip J.;
Fuente
Biological Invasions 20 (12) : 3445–3460 (Diciembre 2018)
Fecha
2018-12
Editorial
Springer
ISSN
1573-1464
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Restringido
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)