首页> 外文期刊>Molecular ecology >Conservation genetics, foraging distance and nest density of the scarce Great Yellow Bumblebee (Bombus distinguendus)
【24h】

Conservation genetics, foraging distance and nest density of the scarce Great Yellow Bumblebee (Bombus distinguendus)

机译:稀有大黄蜂(Bombus distinguendus)的保护遗传学,觅食距离和巢密度

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

The conservation genetics of bees is of particular interest because many bee species are in decline, so jeopardizing the essential ecosystem service of plant pollination that they provide. In addition, as social haplodiploids, inbred bees may be vulnerable to the extra genetic load represented by the production of sterile diploid males. Using microsatellite markers, we investigated the genetic structure of populations of the Great Yellow Bumblebee (Bombus distinguendus Morawitz) in the UK, where this species has undergone a precipitous decline. By means of a mixture of analytical methods and simulation, we also extended - and then applied - genetic methods for estimating foraging distance and nest density in wild bees. B. distinguendus populations were characterized by low expected heterozygosity and allelic richness, inbreeding coefficients not significantly different from zero, absence of detected diploid males, absence of substantial demographic bottlenecking, and population substructuring at large (c. 100+ km) but not small (10s of km) spatial scales. The minimum average effective population size at our sampling sites was low (c. 25). In coastal grassland (machair), the estimated modal foraging distance of workers was 391 m, with 95% of foraging activity occurring within 955 m of the nest, and estimated nest density was 19.3 nests km~(-2). These findings show that B. distinguendus exhibits some genetic features of scarce, declining or fragmented populations. Moreover, B. distinguendus workers appear to forage over above-average distances and nests remain thinly distributed even in current strongholds. These considerations should inform future conservation actions for this and similar species.
机译:蜜蜂的保护遗传学特别令人感兴趣,因为许多蜜蜂物种正在减少,因此危害了它们提供的植物授粉所必需的生态系统服务。另外,作为社会单倍体,自交蜂可能​​不易受到以不育二倍体雄性的生产为代表的额外遗传负荷。使用微卫星标记,我们调查了英国大黄蜂(Bombus distinguendus Morawitz)种群的遗传结构,该物种在此急剧下降。通过混合使用分析方法和模拟方法,我们还扩展了遗传方法,然后应用遗传方法来估计野蜂的觅食距离和巢密度。 B. distinguendus种群的特征在于预期的杂合度和等位基因丰富度低,近交系数与零无显着差异,未检测到二倍体雄性,不存在人口统计学上的瓶颈以及种群结构大(约100+ km)但不小( 10s of km)空间尺度。我们采样点的最小平均有效人口数量很低(c。25)。在沿海草地(椅子)上,工人的模态觅食距离估计为391 m,其中95%的觅食活动发生在巢的955 m内,估计的巢密度为19.3巢km〜(-2)。这些发现表明,B。distinguendus表现出某些遗传特征,即种群稀缺,数量下降或碎片化。而且,B。Distinguendus工人似乎在超过平均距离的地方觅食,即使在当前的据点中,巢穴也仍然分布得很薄。这些考虑因素应为该物种和类似物种的未来保护行动提供依据。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号