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Ancient and modern colonization of North America by hemlock woolly adelgid,Adelges tsugae (Hemiptera: Adelgidae), an invasive insect from East Asia
Authors:Nathan P. Havill  Shigehiko Shiyake  Ashley Lamb Galloway  Robert G. Foottit  Guoyue Yu  Annie Paradis  Joseph Elkinton  Michael E. Montgomery  Masakazu Sano  Adalgisa Caccone
Affiliation:1. Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Hamden, Connecticut 06514, USA;2. Osaka Museum of Natural History, Osaka 546‐0034, Japan;3. Department of Entomology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA;4. Canadian National Collection of Insects, Agriculture and Agri‐Food Canada, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0C6, Canada;5. Institute of Plant & Environmental Protection, Beijing Academy of Agricultural & Forestry Science, Beijing 100097, China;6. Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, USA;7. Systematic Entomology, Graduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060‐8589, Hokkaido, Japan;8. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA
Abstract:Hemlock woolly adelgid, Adelges tsugae, is an invasive pest of hemlock trees (Tsuga) in eastern North America. We used 14 microsatellites and mitochondrial COI sequences to assess its worldwide genetic structure and reconstruct its colonization history. The resulting information about its life cycle, biogeography and host specialization could help predict invasion by insect herbivores. We identified eight endemic lineages of hemlock adelgids in central China, western China, Ulleung Island (South Korea), western North America, and two each in Taiwan and Japan, with the Japanese lineages specializing on different Tsuga species. Adelgid life cycles varied at local and continental scales with different sexual, obligately asexual and facultatively asexual lineages. Adelgids in western North America exhibited very high microsatellite heterozygosity, which suggests ancient asexuality. The earliest lineages diverged in Asia during Pleistocene glacial periods, as estimated using approximate Bayesian computation. Colonization of western North America was estimated to have occurred prior to the last glacial period by adelgids directly ancestral to those in southern Japan, perhaps carried by birds. The modern invasion from southern Japan to eastern North America caused an extreme genetic bottleneck with just two closely related clones detected throughout the introduced range. Both colonization events to North America involved host shifts to unrelated hemlock species. These results suggest that genetic diversity, host specialization and host phylogeny are not predictive of adelgid invasion. Monitoring non‐native sentinel host trees and focusing on invasion pathways might be more effective methods of preventing invasion than making predictions using species traits or evolutionary history.
Keywords:complex life cycle  cyclical parthenogenesis  host range  invasive species
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