Open Access
Mitochondrial DNA haplotypes indicate two postglacial re‐colonization routes of the spruce bark beetle I ps typographus through northern Europe to Scandinavia
Author(s) -
Mayer François,
Björklund Niklas,
Wallén Johan,
Långström Bo,
CasselLundhagen Anna
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of zoological systematics and evolutionary research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.769
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1439-0469
pISSN - 0947-5745
DOI - 10.1111/jzs.12063
Subject(s) - bark beetle , picea abies , biology , refugium (fishkeeping) , phylogeography , colonization , genetic diversity , biological dispersal , ecology , intraspecific competition , curculionidae , population , phylogenetics , demography , habitat , gene , biochemistry , sociology
Abstract Species in northern Europe re‐colonized the region after the last glacial maximum via several routes, which could have lingering signatures in current intraspecific trait variation. The spruce bark beetle, I ps typographus , occurs across Europe, and biological differences have been found between southern and northern Scandinavian populations. However, the postglacial history of I . typographus in Scandinavia has not been previously studied at a fine geographical scale. Therefore, we collected specimens across northern Europe and analysed the genetic variation in a quite large mitochondrial fragment (698 bp). A high genetic diversity was found in some of the most northern populations, in the Baltic States, Gotland and central Europe. Detected genetic and phylogeographic structures suggest that I . typographus re‐colonized Scandinavia via two pathways, one from the northeast and one from the south. These findings are consistent with the re‐colonization history of its host plant, P icea abies . However, we observed low haplotype and nucleotide diversity in southern Scandinavian populations of I . typographus , indicating that (unlike P . abies ) it did not disperse across the Baltic Sea in multiple events. Further, the divergence among Scandinavian populations was shallow, conflicting with a scenario where I . typographus expanded concurrently with its host plant from a ‘cryptic refugium’ in the northwest.