| Literature DB >> 25342243 |
Miroslawa Dabert1, Stephen J Coulson, Dariusz J Gwiazdowicz, Børge Moe, Sveinn Are Hanssen, Elisabeth M Biersma, Hanne E Pilskog, Jacek Dabert.
Abstract
Recent molecular phylogenetic analyses have revealed that some apparently oligoxenous feather mite species are in fact monoxenous cryptic species with little morphological differentiation. In this study we analyzed two species, Zachvatkinia isolata (Avenzoariidae) and Alloptes (Sternalloptes) stercorarii (Alloptidae) which prefer different parts of the plumage of two sister species of birds: arctic skua (Stercorarius parasiticus) and long-tailed skua (S. longicaudus) breeding on tundra in the High Arctic archipelago of Svalbard. Given that there are no reports about hybridization events between the host species, we expected that both skuas would have a species-specific acarofauna. The genetic distances among DNA-barcode sequences (COI and 28S rDNA), phylogenetic tree topologies, and haplotype networks of the COI sequences of mites suggested extensive gene flow in Z. isolata between and within populations inhabiting both skua species, whereas the Alloptes populations were host specific and sufficiently genetically separated as to warrant species-level status. The discrepancy in the genetic structure of Alloptes and Zachvatkinia populations suggests frequent but transient contacts between the two skua species in which the probability of mite exchange is much higher for Zachvatkinia, which is present in high numbers and inhabits exposed parts of primary flight feathers, than for the less abundant Alloptes that lives primarily in more protected and inaccessible parts of the plumage. We discuss the possible nature of these contacts between host species and the area(s) where they might take place. The star-like structures in the haplotype network as well as high haplotype diversity and low nucleotide diversity observed in Z. isolata are concordant with the known dispersal strategy of feather mites: vertical colonization of new host individuals followed by rapid growth of founder populations.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25342243 PMCID: PMC4274374 DOI: 10.1007/s10493-014-9856-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Appl Acarol ISSN: 0168-8162 Impact factor: 2.132
Fig. 1Males of Zachvatkinia isolata (A) and Alloptes (Sternalloptes) stercorarii (B) shown in the same scale, ventral view, am—ambulacrum
Fig. 2Stylized map of wintering areas of arctic skuas (dotted area) and long-tailed skuas (hatched area) from Svalbard, along with shared flyways during autumn (solid lines) and spring (stippled lines) and shared staging areas (S) in autumn and spring
Fig. 3Composition of the Zachvatkinia isolata population on arctic skuas (yellow) and long-tailed skuas (blue) collected in Svalbard in 2010 and 2011. M male, F female, T tritonymph, P protonymph, L larva. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4Maximum likelihood tree of the Zachvatkinia and Alloptes COI haplotypes found on arctic skuas (yellow) and long-tailed skuas (blue). Circle size is relative to the number of haplotype copies present in the dataset. Due to very short branches the part of the tree concerning Z. isolata is given in a larger scale (0.1). Outgroup haplotype—Freyana anatina (Pterolichoidea). The bootstrap support values >50 % are given at branches for MP (regular) and ML (italic). MP tree (not shown) was topologically very close to ML reconstruction. (Color figure online)
Estimates of average evolutionary divergence (%) over COI sequence pairs between analyzed feather mite Alloptes and Zachvatkinia species
| Population | Intraspecific | Interspecific | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| n/c | 1.94 | 2.26 | 2.27 | 2.32 | |
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| 0.25 (0.13) | 19.39 | 2.17 | 2.17 | 2.16 | |
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| 1.12 (0.26) | 23.57 | 23.38 | 0.24 | 1.83 | |
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| 1.02 (0.23) | 23.69 | 23.44 | 1.07 | 1.84 | |
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| n/c | 24.19 | 22.67 | 16.77 | 16.81 | |
Standard error estimates (in parentheses or above the diagonal) were obtained by a bootstrap procedure (500 replicates). Analyses were conducted using the Kimura 2-parameter method
SL mites sampled on long-tailed skuas, SP mites sampled on arctic skuas
Fig. 5Median-joining haplotype networks showing genealogy of Zachvatkinia isolata haplotypes found on arctic skuas (yellow) and long-tailed skuas (blue). Circle size is relative to the number of haplotype copies present in the dataset. (Color figure online)