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Patterns of population genetic structure and diversity across bumble bee communities in the Pacific Northwest
Authors:Jonathan B. Koch  Chris Looney  Walter S. Sheppard  James P. Strange
Affiliation:1.Department of Biology,Utah State University,Logan,USA;2.USDA-ARS Pollinating Insects-Biology, Management, and Systematics Research,Logan,USA;3.Washington State Department of Agriculture,Olympia,USA;4.Department of Entomology,Washington State University,Pullman,USA;5.Department of Biology and Tropical Conservation Biology & Environmental Science Graduate Program,University of Hawaii at Hilo,Hilo,USA
Abstract:Patterns of genetic structure and diversity are largely mediated by a species’ ecological niche and sensitivity to climate variation. Some species with narrow ecological niches have been found to exhibit increased population differentiation, limited gene flow across populations, and reduced population genetic diversity. In this study, we examine patterns of population genetic structure and diversity of four bumble bee species that are broadly sympatric, but do not necessarily inhabit the same ecological niche in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. Testing for the effect of isolation by geographic distance (IBD) with linearized F st and D est found that Bombus sylvicola and B. mixtus exhibited significant IBD across populations. In contrast, both B. melanopygus and B. flavifrons, two species that are distributed across a broad elevation gradient, exhibited no IBD, a result further corroborated by Bayesian a priori population assignment tests. Furthermore, we discovered that B. sylvicola populations distributed on the Olympic Peninsula have significantly less average allelic diversity than populations distributed in the Cascade Mountains. Our results suggest that populations distributed in the Olympic Mountains represent a distinct genetic cluster relative to the Cascade Mountains, with B. sylvicola and B. mixtus likely experiencing the greatest degree of population genetic differentiation relative to B. flavifrons and B. melanopygus. While bumble bees are known to co-exist across a diversity of habitats, our results demonstrate that underlying population genetic structure and diversity may not necessarily be similar across species, and are largely governed by their respective niches.
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