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Contrasting whole-genome diversity patterns and adaptation in honeybees from two southern European glacial refugia

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Human-driven environmental change makes understanding genetic variation essential for protecting keystone species such as the honeybee, Apis mellifera. We compared whole-genome mitonuclear variation in subspecies inhabiting the Iberian and Italian Peninsulas, which have been shaped by distinct glacial histories and modern beekeeping pressures. Italian honeybees showed a stronger anthropogenic imprint, driven largely by recent human-mediated gene flow. Both subspecies showed mitonuclear asymmetry, approximate south-to-northeast clinal pattern, evidence of ancient or recent admixture with other subspecies and lineages, and genomic signatures of a 20th-century bottleneck. African ancestry was present both, though ancient and predominantly mitochondrial in Iberia, but recent and predominantly nuclear Italy. Italian honeybees also had persistently lower historical effective population sizes, lower nucleotide versity, and higher kinship. Shared and subspecies-specific enriched genes suggest both convergent and unique adaptive responses. These results highlight complex evolutionary dynamics and the significant netic impact of modern beekeeping.
Autores principais:García, Carlos A. Yadró
Outros Autores:Henriques, Dora; Cilia, Giovanni; Rufino, José; Vella, Cristina; Aglagane, Abdessamad; Sagastume, Soledad; Zammit-Mangion, Marion; Martín-Hernández, Raquel; Nanetti, Antonio; Pinto, M. Alice
Assunto:Entomology Evolutionary biology Zoology
Ano:2026
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Instituto Politécnico de Bragança
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Biblioteca Digital do IPB
Descrição
Resumo:Human-driven environmental change makes understanding genetic variation essential for protecting keystone species such as the honeybee, Apis mellifera. We compared whole-genome mitonuclear variation in subspecies inhabiting the Iberian and Italian Peninsulas, which have been shaped by distinct glacial histories and modern beekeeping pressures. Italian honeybees showed a stronger anthropogenic imprint, driven largely by recent human-mediated gene flow. Both subspecies showed mitonuclear asymmetry, approximate south-to-northeast clinal pattern, evidence of ancient or recent admixture with other subspecies and lineages, and genomic signatures of a 20th-century bottleneck. African ancestry was present both, though ancient and predominantly mitochondrial in Iberia, but recent and predominantly nuclear Italy. Italian honeybees also had persistently lower historical effective population sizes, lower nucleotide versity, and higher kinship. Shared and subspecies-specific enriched genes suggest both convergent and unique adaptive responses. These results highlight complex evolutionary dynamics and the significant netic impact of modern beekeeping.