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Patterns of genetic differentiation in Colorado potato beetle correlate with contemporary, not historic, potato land cover
- Source :
- Evolutionary Applications, Vol 12, Iss 4, Pp 804-814 (2019), Evolutionary Applications
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2019.
-
Abstract
- Changing landscape heterogeneity can influence connectivity and alter genetic variation in local populations, but there can be a lag between ecological change and evolutionary responses. Temporal lag effects might be acute in agroecosystems, where land cover has changed substantially in the last two centuries. Here, we evaluate how patterns of an insect pest’s genetic differentiation are related to past and present agricultural land cover change over a 150‐year period. We quantified change in the amount of potato, Solanum tuberosum L., land cover since 1850 using county‐level agricultural census reports, obtained allele frequency data from 7,408 single‐nucleotide polymorphism loci, and compared effects of historic and contemporary landscape connectivity on genetic differentiation of Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, in two agricultural landscapes in the United States. We found that potato land cover peaked in Wisconsin in the early 1900s, followed by rapid decline and spatial concentration, whereas it increased in amount and extent in the Columbia Basin of Oregon and Washington beginning in the 1960s. In both landscapes, we found small effect sizes of landscape resistance on genetic differentiation, but a 20× to 1,000× larger effect of contemporary relative to historic landscape resistances. Demographic analyses suggest population size trajectories were largely consistent among regions and therefore are not likely to have differentially impacted the observed patterns of population structure in each region. Weak landscape genetic associations might instead be related to the coarse resolution of our historical land cover data. Despite rapid changes in agricultural landscapes over the last two centuries, genetic differentiation among L. decemlineata populations appears to reflect ongoing landscape change. The historical landscape genetic framework employed in this study is broadly applicable to other agricultural pests and might reveal general responses of pests to agricultural land‐use change.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Demographic history
agroecosystem
lcsh:Evolution
Land cover
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
03 medical and health sciences
land cover
Agricultural land
genotyping by sequencing
lcsh:QH359-425
Genetics
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
030304 developmental biology
2. Zero hunger
0303 health sciences
Resistance (ecology)
biology
Ecology
business.industry
Population size
Colorado potato beetle
landscape genetics
Original Articles
15. Life on land
demographic history
biology.organism_classification
Agriculture
Original Article
insect pest
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
business
Landscape connectivity
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17524571
- Volume :
- 12
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Evolutionary Applications
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6d7a9c22711eae67a63d3eb8da5ea657
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.12757