| Literature DB >> 31430316 |
Vyacheslav Martemyanov1,2, Roman Bykov3, Marya Demenkova3, Yuri Gninenko4, Sergei Romancev5, Ivan Bolonin5, Ilia Mazunin6,7, Irina Belousova1, Yuri Akhanaev1, Sergey Pavlushin1, Polina Krasnoperova8, Yury Ilinsky3,6,9.
Abstract
Gypsy moth Lymantria dispar L. 1758 (Lepidoptera: Erebidae) is one of the most dangerous forest pests of the Holarctic region. Outbreaks of gypsy moth populations lead to significant defoliation of local forests. Within the vast territory of the West Siberian Plain, we noted the outbreak front movement in the north-east direction with a speed 100-200 km per year. The reason for the outbreak's movement is still unclear because L. dispar females are characterised by limited flight ability, which is not enough to support that movement per se. Herein, we analysed the mtDNA divergence pattern among L. dispar populations collected from the vast territory of the West Siberian Plain to determine the boundaries of populations and reveal the effect of the outbreak's front movement on mtDNA patterns of populations. The 590-bp region of the cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene of the mitochondrial genome was sequenced for 220 specimens that were collected from 18 localities along a transect line (~ 1400 km). Our results clearly show that the gypsy moth populations of the vast Siberian territory are not subdivided. This result can be explained by extensive genetic exchange among local populations. Taking into account that the flight ability of L. dispar females is rather limited, we suggest that spreading occurs through ballooning of early instar larvae. This hypothesis was confirmed by the coincidence of the outbreaks' movement direction with that of the dominant winds, complemented by the observation of ballooned larvae far from a forest edge.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31430316 PMCID: PMC6701763 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220954
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Map of Lymantria dispar collection in 2015–2016 seasons.
Localities, population phases and mtDNA haplotypes in collection of West Siberia plain territory of 2015–2016 seasons.
| Population, locality name | Coordinates | Phase of population cycle, year | N | Number of haplotypes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shaidurovo (14) | N54.29 E81.15 | Rising, 2015; 2016 | 12 | I 5, II 5, III 2 |
| Bazovo (15) | N54.34 E81.13 | Rising, 2015; 2016 | 26 | I 14, II 8, III 3, IIe 1 |
| noname (16) | N54.55 E80.52 | Rising, 2015; 2016 | 12 | I 5, II 2, III 3, IIIb 1, IIIc 1 |
| Starye Karachi (1) | N55.28 E77.02 | Rising, 2015 | 4 | I 2, II 1, IIIa 1 |
| noname (2) | N55.30 E77.10 | Rising, 2015 | 1 | I 1 |
| Chany (3) | N55.24 E76.49 | Rising, 2015; 2016 | 16 | I 5, II 4, III 6, IV 1 |
| Tatarsk (4) | N55.10 E75.53 | Peak, 2015; Decline 2016 | 23 | I 9, II 10, III 2, Ia 1, IIa 1 |
| Krasny Yar (5) | N55.13 E72.53 | Decline, 2015; 2016 | 20 | I 9, II 7, III 2, Ib 1, IIb 1 |
| Lubinsky (6) | N55.10 E72.43 | Peak, 2015; Decline, 2016 | 15 | I 4, II 7, III 3, IIa 1 |
| Novolokti (7) | N56.03 E69.13 | Decline, 2015 | 2 | I 1, II 1 |
| Loktyash (8) | N55.56 E68.54 | Decline, 2015 | 1 | II 1 |
| Berduzhie (9) | N55.48 E68.23 | Decline, 2015; 2016 | 10 | I 6, II 3, IIIa 1 |
| Bolshoy Krasnoyar (13) | N56.30 E67.45 | Decline 2015 | 2 | I 1, II 1 |
| Kyshtyrla (10) | N56.57 E65.44 | Decline, 2015 | 1 | I 1 |
| noname (11) | N56.49 E65.50 | Decline, 2015; Peak, 2016 | 30 | I 14, II 12, III 2, IIc 1, IId 1 |
| Kirovskiy (12) | N56.42 E65.42 | Decline, 2015; Peak 2016 | 33 | I 18, II 8, III 6, Ic 1 |
| Kamensk-Uralsky (19) | N56.47 E61.73 | Troughs, 2015 | 5 | I 2, II 2, III 1 |
| Chebarkul (22) | N54.75 E60.30 | Troughs, 2016 | 7 | I 1, II 2, III 3, IIf 1 |
Footnotes:
* Number in brackets is an internal sample site.
Fig 2Time-series data of Lymantria dispar outbreak areas in administrative oblasts of Russia in West Siberia.
Fig 3Spectral densities of log-transformed time series of squares of defoliated areas (ha).
The characteristics of spectral density for the time series of square of defoliated forests after L. dispar outbreaks occurred in West Siberia.
| oblasts | Frequency fmax of maximum of spectral density | Value of peak of spectral density maximum | Cyclicity of outbreaks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sverdlovsk | 0.045/year | 34.7 | 22.2 |
| Chelyabinsk | 0.045/year | 103.1 | 22.2 |
| Tyumen | 0.045/year | 74.6 | 22.2 |
| Kurgan | 0.045/year | 107.5 | 22.2 |
| Omsk | 0.09/year | 106.5 | 11.1 |
| Novosibirsk | 0.09/year | 69.8 | 11.1 |
The characteristics of cross-correlation functions between defoliated areas of studied oblasts of the Russian Federation; the values of function/t-value are above the main diagonal and the temporal delays (k, years) are below.
| Sverdlovsk | Chelyabinsk | Tyumen | Kurgan | Omsk | Novosibirsk | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sverdlovsk | 0.69/3.17* | 0.60/2.5* | 0.59/2.42* | 0.21/0.98 | 0.66/2.95* | |
| Chelyabinsk | -2 | 0.66/2.95* | 0.65/2.94* | 0.35/1.32* | 0.56/2.17* | |
| Tyumen | -6 | -3 | 0.97/4.65* | 0.51/2.43* | 0.77/3.17* | |
| Kurgan | -6 | -3 | 0 | 0.49/1.89* | 0.83/3.42* | |
| Omsk | n.s. | -9 | 0 | -8 | 0.75/3.53* | |
| Novosibirsk | 5 | -8 | -6 | -6 | 1 |
Fig 4The cross-correlation function between time series data of forest defoliation (ha) for Novosibirsk oblast.
The shift of function indicates the temporal delay in the north-east direction: for Karasuk and Kupino districts (a), Karasuk and Krasnozerskiy districts (b), and Karasuk and Kujbyshev districts (c).
Fig 5TSC network of mitochondrial haplotypes of West Siberia plain L. dispar populations.
Romanian numbers mark the haplotypes numbers.
Pairwise Fst distance between populations of L. dispar.
| Population (number of samples) | Chulym | Chany | Omsk | Ishim | Tyumen |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chulym (50) | x | ||||
| Chany (21) | 0.0028 | x | |||
| Omsk (58) | -0.0034 | 0.0357 | x | ||
| Ishim (15) | -0.0112 | 0.0566 | -0.0155 | x | |
| Tumen (64) | -0.0064 | 0.0459 | 0.0031 | -0.0312 | x |
| Ural (12) | 0.0238 | -0.0257 | 0.0292 | 0.0899 | 0.0779 |
Fig 6TSC network of relationships of mtDNA haplotypes of West Siberian and European L. dispar populations.
Romanian numbers mark the haplotypes numbers.