Phylogeography of the Coastal Mosquito Aedes togoi across Climatic Zones: Testing an Anthropogenic Dispersal Hypothesis


Back to previous page
Authors: Sota, T, P. Belton, M. Tseng, H.S. Yong & M. Mogi
Year: 2015
Journal: PLOS One 10 (6) : e0131230   Article Link (DOI)
Title: Phylogeography of the Coastal Mosquito Aedes togoi across Climatic Zones: Testing an Anthropogenic Dispersal Hypothesis
Abstract: The coastal mosquito Aedes togoi occurs more or less continuously from subarctic to subtropic
zones along the coasts of the Japanese islands and the East Asian mainland. It
occurs also in tropical Southeast Asia and the North American Pacific coast, and the populations
there are thought to have been introduced from Japan by ship. To test this hypothesis,
the genetic divergence among geographic populations of A. togoi was studied using
one mitochondrial and three nuclear gene sequences. We detected 71 mitochondrial haplotypes
forming four lineages, with high nucleotide diversity around temperate Japan and
declining towards peripheral ranges. The major lineage (L1) comprised 57 haplotypes from
temperate and subarctic zones in Japan and Southeast Asia including southern China and
Taiwan. Two other lineages were found from subtropical islands (L3) and a subarctic area
(L4) of Japan. The Canadian population showed one unique haplotype (L2) diverged from
the other lineages. In the combined nuclear gene tree, individuals with mitochondrial L4
haplotypes diverged from those with the other mitochondrial haplotypes L1—L3; although
individuals with L1—L3 haplotypes showed shallow divergences in the nuclear gene
sequences, individuals from Southeast Asia and Canada each formed a monophyletic
group. Overall, the genetic composition of the Southeast Asian populations was closely
related to that of temperate Japanese populations, suggesting recent gene flow between
these regions. The Canadian population might have originated from anthropogenic introduction
from somewhere in Asia, but the possibility that it could have spread across the Beringian
land bridge cannot be ruled out.
Back to previous page
 


Departmental members may update their publication list.