Rapid morphological changes in populations of hybrids between Africanized and European honey bees


Autoria(s): Francoy, Tiago Mauricio; Goncalves, L. S.; Jong, David de
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

01/11/2013

01/11/2013

02/08/2013

Resumo

African honey bees, introduced to Brazil in 1956, rapidly dominated the previously introduced European subspecies. To better understand how hybridization between these different types of bees proceeded, we made geometric morphometric analyses of the wing venation patterns of specimens resulting from crosses made between Africanized honey bees (predominantly Apis mellifera scutellata) and Italian honey bees (A. mellifera ligustica) from 1965 to 1967, at the beginning of the Africanization process, in an apiary about 150 km from the original introduction site. Two virgin queens reared from an Italian parental were instrumentally inseminated with semen from drones from an Africanized parental. Six F-1 queens from one of these colonies were open mated with Africanized drones. Resultant F-1 drones were backcrossed to 50 Italian and 50 Africanized parental queens. Five backcross workers were collected from each of eight randomly selected colonies of each type of backcross (N = 5 bees x 8 colonies x 2 types of backcrosses). The F-1 progeny (40 workers and 30 drones) was found to be morphologically closer to the Africanized than to the European parental (N = 20 drones and 40 workers, each); Mahalanobis square distances = 21.6 versus 25.8, respectively, for the workers, and 39.9 versus 46.4, respectively, for the drones. The worker progenies of the backcrosses (N = 40, each) were placed between the respective parental and the F-1 progeny, although closer to the Africanized than to the Italian parentals (Mahalanobis square distance = 6.2 versus 12.1, respectively). Consequently, the most common crosses at the beginning of the Africanization process would have generated individuals more similar to Africanized than to Italian bees. This adds a genetic explanation for the rapid changes in the populational morphometric profile in recently colonized areas. Africanized alleles of wing venation pattern genes are apparently dominant and epistatic.

CAPES

CAPES

CNPq

CNPq

FAPESP [2011/07857-9]

FAPESP

Identificador

Genetics and Molecular Research, Ribeirão Preto, v. 11, n. 3, supl. 1, Part 3, pp. 3349-3356, may 17, 2012

1676-5680

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/37180

10.4238/2012.September.17.5

http://dx.doi.org/10.4238/2012.September.17.5

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Fundacao de Pesquisas Cientificas de Ribeirao Preto

Ribeirão Preto

Relação

Genetics and Molecular Research

Direitos

openAccess

Copyright FUNPEC-EDITORA

Palavras-Chave #Africanized Bee #Apis Mellifera Ligustica #Wing Morphology #Multivariate Statistics #Geometrics Morphometrics #Apis-Mellifera L. #Morphometrics Differences #Tropical Yucatan #Identification #Hybridization #Hymenoptera #Colonies #Success #Mexico #Apidae #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Genetics & Heredity
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion