| Literature DB >> 32448128 |
Gunilla Ståhls1, Rudolf Meier2, Christoph Sandrock3, Martin Hauser4, Ljiljana Šašić Zorić5, Elina Laiho6, Andrea Aracil7, Jovana Doderović8, Rozane Badenhorst9, Phira Unadirekkul2, Nur Arina Binte Mohd Adom2, Leo Wein10, Cameron Richards9, Jeffery K Tomberlin11, Santos Rojo7, Sanja Veselić8, Tuure Parviainen12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The black soldier fly (Diptera: Stratiomyidae, Hermetia illucens) is renowned for its bioconversion ability of organic matter, and is the worldwide most widely used source of insect protein. Despite varying extensively in morphology, it is widely assumed that all black soldier flies belong to the same species, Hermetia illucens. We here screened about 600 field-collected and cultured flies from 39 countries and six biogeographic regions to test this assumption based on data for three genes (mitochondrial COI, nuclear ITS2 & 28S rDNA) and in order to gain insights into the phylogeography of the species.Entities:
Keywords: Black soldier fly; Hermetia illucens; Nuclear rDNA; mtDNA COI haplotypes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32448128 PMCID: PMC7247124 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-020-01627-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1Neighbor-Joining network (uncorrected p-distances) of all haplotypes (labelled with country and sample code). The biogeographical region of the haplotypes is indicated with color-coded filled circles (purple = Afrotropical, pink = Australasia, green = Oriental, orange = Neotropical, yellow = Nearctic, dark blue = Palaearctic). All rearing culture samples are indicated with a black ►. The most abundant COI haplotype resolved in sequence clusters are indicated with Roman numerals I-III with the geographical sources listed in Table 1
Fig. 2a. Median-Joining haplotype network of all field-collected COI haplotypes. The black circles represent putative un-sampled haplotypes. The branch lengths are largely proportional to the numbers of mutational steps separating the haplotypes, and the number(s) of mutational steps are indicated with hashmarks on the branches. The biogeographical region of the haplotypes is color-coded, and the size of circles is proportional to the number of individuals per haplotype. The most abundant COI haplotypes are indicated with Roman numerals I-III with the geographical sources listed in Table 1. b. Median-Joining network of the ten rearing culture COI haplotypes. Descriptions as in Fig. 2a
Occurrences of partly shared haplotypes between rearing cultures and field-collected flies and resolved into three large sequence clusters (Fig. 1 I-III; Fig. 2a). In culture: Country of origin of the rearing facilities (different facilities in the same country indicated with letters A-C) of the studied BSF cultures. The total number of sequenced samples for culture samples in each country indicated in brackets. In nature: Origin of samples obtained from both pristine habitats and other natural areas (sometimes close to fly rearing facilities) with haplotypes identical to cultured flies
| In culture | In nature | |
|---|---|---|
| China: A & B (2); France: A, B & C (3); Kenya (17); South Africa: A, B & C (57); Spain (55); Switzerland (24); USA: A & B (9); Vietnam (1). | AFROTROPICAL: Kenya, South Africa; NEARCTIC: USA; ORIENTAL: Bhutan, China, Indonesia; PALAEARCTIC: Portugal, Russia, South Korea; EASTERN PALAEARCTIC: China. | |
| Australia A, B & C (65); Italy B (1). | AFROTROPICAL: La Reunion, Madagascar, Zambia; AUSTRALASIA: Australia; ORIENTAL: French Polynesia, India, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Vietnam, Bangladesh; PALAEARCTIC: France, South Korea, Switzerland; NEOTROPICAL: Bolivia. | |
| Australia A & B (5); Singapore (4). | AUSTRALASIA: Australia; PALAEARCTIC: Pakistan, South Korea; ORIENTAL: Singapore, Thailand, American Samoa, Bhutan, Malaysia; NEARCTIC: Canada. |