Data from: Insights into the population genetics of an extreme habitat specialist, the wood ant commensal Formicoxenus nitidulus
Data files
May 15, 2025 version files 12.66 KB
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ant_ids_and_locs_low_res.csv
5.21 KB
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genotype_data.csv
4.53 KB
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README.md
2.92 KB
Abstract
Habitat specialists, particularly those that are poor dispersers, are highly susceptible to population isolation as a result of habitat fragmentation. Population isolation can lead to inbreeding, resulting in reduced genetic diversity and an increased risk of local extinction. The shining guest ant, Formicoxenus nitidulus, lives only within the nests of its wood ant hosts. It is thus an extreme habitat specialist, dependent on patchy nesting sites within an already fragmented woodland habitat. We aimed to generate the first data on the population genetics of this species, to characterize its genetic diversity and degree of population isolation. We developed eight novel nuclear microsatellite markers and generated mitochondrial DNA sequence data of the COI region to characterize samples from seven UK F. nitidulus populations collected from nests of three wood ant hosts: Formica aquilonia, Formica lugubris, and Formica rufa. These novel nuclear microsatellite markers can be used in future studies of this species across a wider geographic range and may have utility in other closely related species. We found clear differentiation between Scottish and English F. nitidulus populations. The six largest study populations were genetically diverse, showing signs of effective within-site dispersal. Our data show that wood ant nests often host multiple F. nitidulus colonies. We found that genetic diversity has been maintained in this extreme habitat specialist at risk of population isolation. We also demonstrate that a single wood ant host nest can have high conservation importance for the multiple F. nitidulus colonies it supports.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.9zw3r22rt
Description of the data and file structure
Male Shining Guest Ant (Formicoxenus nititulus) specimens were collected from the surface of host wood ants (Formica rufa, Formica aquilonia, or Formica lugubris) at 7 sites across the UK in 2020-2021.
Files and variables
File: genotype_data.csv
Description: Microsatellite data for Formicoxenus nitidulus collected from wood ant host nests
Variables
- id: Specimen ID
- loc13: Microsatellite locus 13
- loc14: Microsatellite locus 14
- loc35: Microsatellite locus 35
- loc45: Microsatellite locus 45
- loc48: Microsatellite locus 48
- loc53: Microsatellite locus 53
- loc54: Microsatellite locus 54
- loc58: Microsatellite locus 58
- site: Site of collection: AB= Abernethy, Scotland; AV = Aviemore, Scotland; BX = Broxa, England; CF = Cropton Forest, England; FB = Feshiebridge, Scotland; GB = Gaitbarrows, England; LS = Longshaw, England
- nest: ID of host nest
File: ant_ids_and_locs.csv
Description: Sampling location data for Formicoxenus nitidulus collected from wood ant host nests
Variables
- Ant ID: Specimen ID for cross-matching to genotype_data.csv
- Population number: Numerical code for site, used in analyses. 1 = Aviemore, Scotland; 2 = Broxa, England; 3 = Cropton Forest, England; 4 = Feshiebridge, Scotland; 5 = Gaitbarrows, England; 6 = Longshaw, England; 7= Abernethy, Scotland;
- Site ID: Two letter code for site of collection: AB= Abernethy, Scotland; AV = Aviemore, Scotland; BX = Broxa, England; CF = Cropton Forest, England; FB = Feshiebridge, Scotland; GB = Gaitbarrows, England; LS = Longshaw, England
- Site name: Name of site of collection
- Nest ID: ID of host nest for cross-matching to genotype_data.csv
- Host species: Species of wood ant inhabiting host nest
- Longitude: Longitude of host nest, recorded to 8m accuracy, here rounded to 0.1 degrees (see Note 1)
- Latitude: Latitude of host nest, recorded to 8m accuracy, here rounded to 0.1 degrees (see Note 1)
Note 1: As Formicoxenus nitidulus is considered Vulnerable by the IUCN, Dryad policy requires that these location data are presented rounded to 0.1 degrees. The high resolution location dataset is available from the corresponding author on request (Elva Robinson: elva.robinson@york.ac.uk).
Code/software
Code is available at: https://github.com/uoy-research/guest-ant-population-genetics
Access information
Other publicly accessible locations of the data:
