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Piecing together an integrative taxonomic puzzle: microsatellite,wing shape and aedeagus length analyses of Bactrocera dorsalis s.l. (Diptera: Tephritidae) find no evidence of multiple lineages in a proposed contact zone along the Thai/Malay Peninsula
Authors:KAREN F. ARMSTRONG  YUVARIN BOONTOP  LAURA M. BOYKIN  TONI A. CHAPMAN  ANNA ENGLEZOU  STEPHEN L. CAMERON  ANTHONY R. CLARKE
Affiliation:1. CRC for National Plant Biosecurity, Bruce, A.C.T, Australia;2. Bio‐Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, Christchurch, New Zealand;3. School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia;4. Plant Protection Research & Development Group, Department of Agriculture, Bangkok, Thailand;5. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Menangle, NSW, Australia
Abstract:Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) and B. papayae Drew & Hancock represent a closely related sibling species pair for which the biological species limits are unclear; i.e. it is uncertain if they are truely two biological species, or one biological species which has been incorrectly split taxonomically. The geographical ranges of the two taxa are thought to abut or overlap on or around the Isthmus of Kra, a recognised biogeographic barrier located on the narrowest portion of the Thai Peninsula. We collected fresh material of B. dorsalis s.l. (i.e. B. dorsalis s.s.+ B. papayae) in a north–south transect down the Thai Peninsula, from areas regarded as being exclusively B. dorsalis s.s., across the Kra Isthmus, and into regions regarded as exclusively B. papayae. We carried out microsatellite analyses and took measurements of male genitalia and wing shape, both used previously to separate the taxa. No significant population structuring was found in the microsatellite analysis, consistent with one, predominantly panmictic population. Both morphological datasets showed consistent, clinal variation along the transect, without disjunction. No evidence supported historical vicariance driven by the Isthmus of Kra, and no dataset supported the current taxonomy of two species. Rather, within and across the area of range overlap or abutment between the two species, only continuous morphological and genetic variation was recorded. Recognition that morphological traits previously used to separate these taxa are continuous, and that there is no genetic evidence for population segregation in the region of suspected species overlap, is consistent with a growing body of literature that reports no evidence of biological differentiation between these taxa.
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