| Literature DB >> 24949237 |
Muhammad Irfan Ullah1, Fatima Mustafa1, Kate M Kneeland1, Mathew L Brust2, W Wyatt Hoback3, Shripat T Kamble1, John E Foster1.
Abstract
The sagebrush grasshopper, Melanoplus bowditchi Scudder (Orthoptera: Acrididae), is a phytophilous species that is widely distributed in the western United States on sagebrush species. The geographical distribution of M. bowditchi is very similar to the range of its host plants and its feeding association varies in relation to sagebrush distribution. Melanoplus bowditchi bowditchi Scudder and M. bowditchi canus Hebard were described based on their feeding association with different sagebrush species, sand sagebrush and silver sagebrush, respectively. Recently, M. bowditchi have been observed feeding on other plant species in western Nebraska. We collected adult M. bowditchi feeding on four plant species, sand sagebrush, Artemisia filifolia, big sagebrush, A. tridentata, fringed sagebrush, A. frigidus, and winterfat, Krascheninnikovia lanata. We compared the specimens collected from the four plant species for their morphological and genetic differences. We observed no consistent differences among the aedeagal parameres or basal rings among the grasshoppers collected from different host plants. Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism markers were used to test the genetic relationships among the grasshoppers. Analysis of Molecular Variance and distance-based Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic mean dendrogram failed to reveal significant differences. Although the forms showed behavioral and minor color and size differences, the genetic data suggest all forms under study likely interbreed, which indicates they are a single species instead of four species or subspecies. These results indicate that host plant use may influence melanopline phenotype and suggest the need of further genetic analysis of subspecies recognized based on morphology, distribution, and ecology.Entities:
Keywords: AFLP; Deme; Ecotype; Host plant; Melanoplus bowditchi; Morphological variation
Year: 2014 PMID: 24949237 PMCID: PMC4060019 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Lateral view of Melanoplus bowditchii grasshoppers collected feeding on (A) sand sagebrush, (B) fringed sagebrush, (C) winterfat, and (D) big sagebrush.
State, county location, host plant and date of collection for Melanoplus bowditchii specimens used in aedeagus analysis.
| State | County | Location | Host plant | Date | Quantity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nebraska | Dawes | 8 km S of Chadron | Fringed sagebrush | July 24, 2010 | 3 |
| South Dakota | Fall River | 24 km N of Ardmore | Big sagebrush | August 21, 2010 | 3 |
| Nebraska | Morill | 14.4 km SW of Alliance | Sand sagebrush | July 24, 2010 | 3 |
| Nebraska | Scotts Bluff | 12 km N of Minatare | Winterfat | July 17, 2010 | 4 |
Collection information for specimens of M. bowditchi from different host plants and outgroup, Spharagemon collare used in genetic analysis.
Specimens of S. collare were collected with sweep nets from bare soil.
| Species | State | County | Location | Host plant | Date | Quantity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Nebraska | Dawes | 8 km S of Chadron | Fringed sagebrush | July 24, 2010; | 8 |
|
| South Dakota | Fall River | 24 km N of Ardmore | Big sagebrush | August 21, 2010 | 3 |
|
| Nebraska | Morrill | 17.7 km SW of Alliance, | Sand sagebrush | July 9, 2010 | 11 |
|
| Nebraska | Scotts Bluff | 12 km N of Minatare | Winterfat | July 18, 2010 | 10 |
| Nebraska | Dawes | 4.8 km S of Chadron | None | August 22, 2010 | 3 |
Nucleotide sequences of adapters, preamplification primers and selective primers used in this study.
Sequences were described by Vos et al. (1995).
| Oligonucleotide | Purpose | Sequence |
|---|---|---|
| Adapter | 5′-CTCGTAGACTGCGTACC-3′ | |
| Adapter | 5′-AATTGGTACGCAGTCTAC-3′ | |
| Adapter | 5′-GACGATGAGTCCTGAG-3′ | |
| Adapter | 5′-TACTCAGGACTCAT-3′ | |
| E (N + 0) | Preamplification primer | 5′-GACTGCGTACCAATTC-3′ |
| M (N + 1) | Preamplification primer | 5′-GATGAGTCCTGAGTAAC-3′ |
| M-CAA | Selective primer | 5′-GATGAGTCCTGAGTAACAA-3′ |
| M-CTC | Selective primer | 5′-GATGAGTCCTGAGTAACTC-3′ |
| M-CAG | Selective primer | 5′-GATGAGTCCTGAGTAACAG-3′ |
| E-AAC | Selective primer | 5′-GACTGCGTACCAATTCAAC-3′ |
| E-ACT | Selective primer | 5′-GACTGCGTACCAATTCACT-3′ |
| E-AGG | Selective primer | 5′-GACTGCGTACCAATTCAGG-3′ |
| E-ACA | Selective primer | 5′-GACTGCGTACCAATTCACA-3′ |
Selective primer combinations used for AFLP analysis and number of marker bands obtained for each of six types of four-base pair primer sets.
| Primer set | Number of markers | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CAAC | ACAA | 93 |
| 2 | CAAC | ACAG | 112 |
| 3 | CAAC | ACTC | 54 |
| 4 | CACA | ACAG | 41 |
| 5 | CACT | ACAG | 86 |
| 6 | CAGG | ACTC | 83 |
Figure 2Dorsal view of the aedeagus of Melanoplus bowditchi collected from (A) sand sagebrush, (B) fringed sagebrush, (C) winterfat, and (D) big sagebrush.
Figure 3Lateral view of the aedeagus of Melanoplus bowditchi collected from (A) sand sagebrush, (B) fringed sagebrush, (C) winterfat, and (D) big sagebrush.
Figure 4Distance-based Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic mean (UPGMA) dendrogram of M. bowditchi grasshoppers using 1,000 bootstrap replicates.
The dendrogram shows the relationship among individuals. Numbers indicate bootstrap support >50% for populations collected from different host plants.
Analysis of Molecular Variance (AMOVA) results and fixation indices.
Significance was tested with 1,023 permutations. Group 1 was collected from sand sagebrush and fringed sagebrush and Group 2 was collected from winterfat and big sagebrush.
| Source of variation | d.f. | Sum of | Variance | Percentage of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Among groups | 1 | 200.253 | 4.69095 Va | 5.30 |
| Among populations | 2 | 257.326 | 6.99008 Vb | 7.90 |
| Within populations | 28 | 2150.327 | 76.79740 Vc | 86.80 |
| Total | 31 | 2607.906 | 88.47843 | |
| Fixation indices | ||||
Analysis of Nei’s genetic diversity in subdivided populations.
Low G values suggest diversity among populations, and very high Nm values (>1.0) indicate significant gene flow between grasshopper populations. Group 1 was collected from sand sagebrush and fringed sagebrush and Group 2 was collected from winterfat and big sagebrush.
| Ht | Hs |
| Nm | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 | 0.2843 | 0.2266 | 0.2030 | 1.9630 |
| Group 2 | 0.2862 | 0.2665 | 0.0690 | 6.7499 |
| All populations | 0.3127 | 0.2853 | 0.0879 | 5.1905 |
Notes.
Total diversity
Diversity within populations
Diversity among populations
Estimate of gene flow based on G