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Data from: Stay at home aphids: comparative spatial and seasonal metapopulation structure and dynamics of two specialist tansy aphid species studied using microsatellite markers

Cite this dataset

Loxdale, Hugh D. et al. (2011). Data from: Stay at home aphids: comparative spatial and seasonal metapopulation structure and dynamics of two specialist tansy aphid species studied using microsatellite markers [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.bs325

Abstract

Two tansy-feeding aphids – Macrosiphoniella tanacetaria (MA) and Metopeurum fuscoviride (ME) – were studied at a small spatial scale in and around Jena (< 80 km2) using polymorphic microsatellite markers. Both species were found in ~ 60% of sites formerly known to harbour the aphids, although generally when they did occur, they occurred singly (MA ~ 50%; ME ~60%) and rarely together on the same plant at the same time (~10%) and then usually only in the early part of the growing season. This difference may be due to quasi-apparent competition effects elicited to ants farming ME aphids, and preferentially actively eliminating or disturbing MA aphids. In terms of population genetics, both aphids showed extreme genetic heterogeneity within a metapopulation structure, ME more than MA, i.e. higher FST values, ~ 0.4 vs. 0.15, respectively, and limited levels of interpopulation gene flow. Subpopulations often deviated from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and showed linkage disequilibria, as expected in animals with extended parthenogenetic reproduction, and had positive FIS values for most large samples, suggesting inbreeding, and possibly philopatry, certainly in ME. Hierarchical analysis (allele range and number per locus, analysis of molecular variance and FST) strongly suggested that the plant rather than site governs the level of genetic variation. Bayesian clustering analysis revealed that both species had heterogeneous historical genetic patterning, with K (number of subgroups) ranging from 3-7. Evidence is also provided from isolation by distance (IBD) and private allele analyses, that in MA, the presence of winged autumn males, absent in ME where males are wingless, influences comparative population genetic structuring, such that ME subpopulations are comparatively more inbred and genetically differentiated than MA subpopulations. Lastly, additional spatial arrangement (ALLELES-IN-SPACE) analysis showed that in both species, certain subpopulations were genetically isolated from the remainder, probably due to geographical barriers, including intervening buildings and woods. As such, the biology of these tansy aphids living in semi-natural habitats is very different from many pest aphid species examined within agro-ecosystems and infesting ephemeral crops, since the former seem much more reluctant to fly and hence show contrastingly much higher levels of interpopulation divergence, even at small spatial scales as here investigated. Indeed, the number of genotypic clusters found for tansy aphids found using Bayesian approaches is similar to that for the major pest the peach-potato aphid, Myzus persicae, globally.

Usage notes

Location

Germany (50° 56' N - 11° 35' E) in 2007
MA at 11 sites
Jena
ME at 17 sites