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Barcoding stingless bees: genetic diversity of the economically important genus Scaptotrigona in Mesoamerica
Author(s) -
Miguel Hurtado-Burillo,
Carlos Ruíz,
William de Jesús May-Itzá,
José Javier G. QuezadaEuán,
Pilar De la Rúa
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
apidologie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.811
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1297-9678
pISSN - 0044-8435
DOI - 10.1007/s13592-012-0146-9
Subject(s) - stingless bee , dna barcoding , biology , beekeeping , taxonomy (biology) , intraspecific competition , evolutionary biology , zoology , ecology , apidae , hymenoptera
International audienceThe stingless bee genus Scaptotrigona is widely distributed across tropical Mexico and includes economically important species used in stingless beekeeping. As Scaptotrigona colonies are currently or potentially translocated across regions, it is important to analyze the extent of genetic diversity from different populations. Herein, every analyzed Scaptotrigona individual was correctly assigned through DNA barcoding to the three recognized species (Scaptotrigona mexicana, Scaptotrigona pectoralis, and Scaptotrigona hellwegeri). Intraspecific divergence showed a mean value of 0.70 %, whereas the interspecific value was 2.79 %. As predicted by traditional taxonomy, sequence analyses demonstrated the close affinity of S. mexicana with S. hellwegeri. However, this also suggested the existence of cryptic species within S. mexicana, one of the stingless bees exploited for honey production in Mesoamerica. These results confirm the hypothesis that the DNA barcoding technique may at least differentiate stingless bee taxa accepted by current taxonomy

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