4.2 Article

Tracking the origin of an invasive species: Drosophila subobscura in Argentina

期刊

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
卷 22, 期 3, 页码 650-658

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2008.01659.x

关键词

bottleneck; colonization; inversion polymorphism; lethal genes; microsatellite loci

资金

  1. M.E.C. (Spain) [BOS2003-05904-C02-02, CGL2006-13423-C02-02, CGL2006-13423-C02-01]
  2. EU (FEDER)
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya (Spain) [SGR2005 00995]
  4. CONICET [PIP 6357/05-06]
  5. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata [15/E288, EXA 341/06]
  6. Universidad Autonoma de Entre Rios [PIDA 787/06]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Biological invasions are excellent opportunities to study the evolutionary forces leading to the adaptation of a species to a new habitat. Knowledge of the introduction history of colonizing species helps tracking colonizing routes and assists in defining management strategies for invasive species. The Palearctic species Drosophila subobscura is a good model organism for tracking colonizations since it was detected in Chile and western North America three decades ago and later on in the Atlantic coast of Argentina. To unravel the origin of the Argentinean colonizers two populations have been analysed with several genetic markers. Chromosomal arrangements and microsatellite alleles found in Argentina are almost similar to those observed in Chile and USA. The lethal allelism test demonstrates that the lethal gene associated with the O-5 inversions in Argentina is identical to that found in Chile and USA, strongly supporting the hypothesis that all the American colonizing populations originated from the same colonization event. A secondary bottleneck is detected in the Argentinean populations and the genetic markers suggest that these populations originated from the invasion of 80-150 founding individuals from Chile.

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