Data from: Were bed bugs the first urban pest insect? Genome-wide patterns of bed bug demography mirror global human expansion
Data files
Jun 04, 2025 version files 15.52 KB
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bat3.blueprint
1.70 KB
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BedBugDemography.R
4.10 KB
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command_line_code.txt
1.10 KB
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hum3.blueprint
1.70 KB
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plot_betapsmc.R
1.79 KB
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README_bedbug_betapsmc.sh
3.10 KB
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README.md
2.03 KB
Abstract
There are calls for research into the historical evolutionary relationships between humans and their commensals, as it would greatly inform models that predict the spread of pests and diseases under urban population expansion. The earliest civilizations emerged ~10,000 years ago and created conditions ideal for the establishment and spread of commensal urban pests. Commensal relations between humans and pests likely emerged with these early civilizations; however, for most species (e.g., German cockroach and black rat) these relationships are unlikely to have formed prior to 5,000 years ago. Following comparative whole genome analysis of bed bugs, Cimex lectularius, belonging to two genetically distinct lineages, one associated with bats and the other with humans, coupled with demographic modelling, our findings suggest that while their association with humans dates back potentially hundreds of thousands of years, a dramatic change in the effective population size of the human-associated lineage occurred ~13,000 years ago; a pattern not found in the bat-associated lineage. The timing and magnitude of the demographic patterns provide compelling evidence that the human-associated lineage closely tracked the demographic history of modern humans and their movement into the first cities. As such, bed bugs may represent the first true urban pest insect species.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.73n5tb380
Description of the data and file structure
This dataset contains the code required to replicate the analyses presented in the associated publication. The genomic data are deposited in NCBI short read archives (SRA) under Bioproject PRJNA1176704. The short reads are in fasta files which were used as input for Bowtie v 2.4.1, variants were inferred and vcf file was generated using bcftools 1.11. Sites with >50% missing data were removed using vcftools v 0.1.18 and exported as filtered vcf file for further analyses. Genetic diversity, π, and Tajima'sD were estimated using vcftools with a 1 Kb sliding window, for all samples combined and for each lineage separately, and output as a text file for analysis and visualization in R v 4.3.0.
Files and variables
File: BedBugDemography.R
Description: R program file that includes plotting for the figures and PCA generation.
File: command_line_code.txt
Description: Command line used for the programs mentioned in the methods
File: plot_betapsmc.R
Description: R code for plotting Supp Figure
File: README_bedbug_betapsmc.sh
Description: readme file to generate beta-psmc analysis
File: bat3.blueprint
Description: blueprint file for bat lineage staiwayplot 2 analysis with 3 generations per year. This was then edited for 4-6 generations and re-run for each generation time.
File: hum3.blueprint
Description: blueprint file for human lineage staiwayplot 2 analysis with 3 generations per year. This was then edited for 4-6 generations and re-run for each generation time.
Access information
Other publicly accessible locations of the data:
- BioProject: Processed
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- PRJNA1176704 : Cimex lectularius bat and human lineage comparison
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