| Literature DB >> 28348934 |
Abstract
The wood-feeding cockroach Cryptocercus punctulatus Scudder (Blattodea: Cryptocercidae) is an important member of the dead wood (saproxylic) community in montane forests of the southeastern United States. However, its population biology remains poorly understood. Here, aspects of family group co-occurrence were characterized to provide basic information that can be extended by studies on the evolution and maintenance of sub-sociality. Broad sampling across the species' range was coupled with molecular data (mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences). The primary questions were: (1) what proportion of rotting logs contain two or more different mtDNA haplotypes and how often can this be attributed to multiple families inhabiting the same log, (2) are multi-family logs spatially clustered, and (3) what levels of genetic differentiation among haplotypes exist within a log, and how genetically similar are matrilines of co-occurring family groups? Multi-family logs were identified on the premise that three different mtDNA haplotypes, or two different haplotypes among adult females, is inconsistent with a single family group founded by one male-female pair. Results showed that of the 88 rotting logs from which multiple adult C. punctulatus were sampled, 41 logs (47%) contained two or more mtDNA haplotypes, and at least 19 of these logs (22% overall) were inferred to be inhabited by multiple families. There was no strong evidence for spatial clustering of the latter class of logs. The frequency distribution of nucleotide differences between co-occurring haplotypes was strongly right-skewed, such that most haplotypes were only one or two mutations apart, but more substantial divergences (up to 18 mutations, or 1.6% uncorrected sequence divergence) do occasionally occur within logs. This work represents the first explicit investigation of family group co-occurrence in C. punctulatus, providing a valuable baseline for follow-up studies.Entities:
Keywords: Appalachian Mountains; Cryptocercus; Dead wood; Family group; Genetic diversity; Mitochondrial DNA; Saproxylic
Year: 2017 PMID: 28348934 PMCID: PMC5366060 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Characteristics of mtDNA sequence data generated from 245 C. punctulatus individuals sampled in the present study.
Summary statistics are presented for each gene separately, and also for the concatenated dataset. Abbreviations are as follows: number of base pairs, bp; proportion of guanine plus cytosine nucleotides, G+C%; maximum-likelihood estimate (GTR+I+G model) of transition/transversion ratio, ts∕tv; number of segregating sites, S; and number of unique haplotypes, Nhap.
| mtDNA gene region | Alignment length (bp) | G+C% | GenBank accessions | |||
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| COI | 762 | 34.4 | 4.2 | 199 | 142 |
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| COII | 363 | 25.7 | 6.7 | 109 | 64 |
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| Concatenated | 1,125 | 33.8 | 4.9 | 308 | 155 |
All possible hypothetical combinations of mtDNA haplotype × individual sex, for a rotting log from which three adults were sampled.
For each row, different typeface (italics, underlined, or normal) represents different mtDNA haplotypes among individuals within a log, M indicates a male (i.e., father or son), and F indicates a female (i.e., mother or daughter). Multi-haplotype logs that unambiguously contain multiple families are labeled MF, whereas those which are consistent with the existence of only a single family are labeled OMH. Logs that contain a single mtDNA haplotype are designated SH.
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Figure 1Map showing spatial distributions of classified rotting logs.
Map of the southeastern USA showing spatial distributions of rotting logs classified as single haplotype (green circle), multi-family (red star), or other multi-haplotype (blue diamond) logs, based on mtDNA sequence data coupled with information on the sex of C. punctulatus individuals. State abbreviations are: Alabama, AL; Georgia, GA; Kentucky, KY; North Carolina, NC; South Carolina, SC; Tennessee, TN; Virginia, VA; and West Virginia, WV.
Figure 2Frequency distribution of the number of nucleotide differences between pairs of non-redundant mtDNA haplotypes from C. punctulatus individuals sampled from the same rotting log.
Shading of bars represents the proportional contribution of multi-family (black plus grey) vs. other multi-haplotype (white) logs to the overall tally. The bi-partitioning of multi-family logs delineates comparisons that could (black) vs. could not (pale grey) be clearly identified as representing between-family comparisons.