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Impact of native vegetation cover near crops on the occurrence and molecular diversity of fire ants
Authors:Victor H. Nagatani  Manuela O. Ramalho  Juliana M. C. Alves  Rodrigo F. Souza  Débora Y. Kayano  Nathalia S. Silva  Otávio G. M. Silva  Ricardo Harakava  Odair C. Bueno  Alexandre W. S. Hilsdorf  Maria S. C. Morini
Affiliation:1. UMC-University of Mogi das Cruzes, São Paulo, Brazil;2. Department of Biology, West Chester University, West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA;3. MPEG, Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Coordination of Earth Sciences and Ecology, Belém, Brazil;4. Secretaria da Agricultura e Abastecimento, Instituto Biológico, Laboratório de Bioquímica Fitopatologia, São Paulo, Brazil;5. Instituto de Biociências, UNESP-Universidade Estadual Paulista, Campus de Rio Claro, Centro de Estudos de Insetos Sociais, São Paulo, Brazil
Abstract:Solenopsis invicta and Solenopsis saevissima are the most common fire ants in Brazil. Environmental disturbances favour the colony dispersal of both species, particularly those with an anthropogenic origin. However, the frequencies of the species can vary according to the amount of anthropogenic disturbances. Crops near native vegetation fragments is a common landscape in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Here, we analyse if there is influence of native vegetation cover on the occurrence of these fire ants and their molecular diversity in crops. Our hypothesis is that these species are antagonistic in terms of occurrence and molecular diversity when compared in the same habitat. We selected crops near fragments with around 50% of native vegetation cover, a percentage informative enough to detect biological responses from insects belonging to a same order. Nests were collected and the species were identified using external morphology, and mtDNA COI sequences. We reject our hypothesis, which suggest that the species colonize the vegetation patches around crops in a similar way. Solenopsis invicta is not limited by vegetation cover, and has a high haplotype diversity when compared to S. saevissima, particularly when the vegetation cover is greater than 50%. Additionally, the vegetation cover seems to not have influence in the total number of haplotypes, but the species have haplotypes that are exclusive to each landscape. Our findings suggest that S. invicta is expanding to native vegetation areas that it has not occupied before, as S. saevissima was dominant there.
Keywords:agricultural landscapes  anthropogenic disturbances  Atlantic Forest  genetic diversity  human-modified landscape  olericulture
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