AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates local adaptation in spider mites in China, emphasizing the influence of short generation times and large populations on evolutionary processes.
  • Researchers conducted population genomic analysis on 246 spider mites and found evidence of their origin in southwestern China, followed by significant spread coinciding with historical glaciation events.
  • Results indicate that one spider mite species shows greater local adaptation, with a higher number of genes linked to precipitation and elevation, suggesting that climate factors may contribute to the pests' increasing importance.

Article Abstract

Local adaptation is particularly likely in invertebrate pests that typically have short generation times and large population sizes, but there are few studies on pest species investigating local adaptation and separating this process from contemporaneous and historical gene flow. Here, we use a population genomic approach to investigate evolutionary processes in the two most dominant spider mites in China, Ehara and Ehara et Gotoh, which have wide distributions, short generation times, and large population sizes. We generated genome resequencing of 246 spider mites mostly from China, as well as Japan and Canada at a combined total depth of 3,133×. Based on demographic reconstruction, we found that both mite species likely originated from refugia in southwestern China and then spread to other regions, with the dominant spreading ~3,000 years later than . Estimated changes in population sizes of the pests matched known periods of glaciation and reinforce the recent expansion of the dominant spider mites. showed a greater extent of local adaptation with more genes (76 vs. 17) associated with precipitation, including candidates involved in regulation of homeostasis of water and ions, signal transduction, and motor skills. In both species, many genes (135 in and 95 in ) also showed signatures of selection related to elevation, including G-protein-coupled receptors, cytochrome P450s, and ABC-transporters. Our results point to historical expansion processes and climatic adaptation in these pests which could have contributed to their growing importance, particularly in the case of .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7691463PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.13086DOI Listing

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