TY - JOUR
T1 - Habitat-related mtDNA polymorphism in the stored-bean pest Callosobruchus chinensis (Coleoptera
T2 - Bruchidae)
AU - Tuda, M.
AU - Wasano, N.
AU - Kondo, N.
AU - Horng, S. B.
AU - Chou, L. Y.
AU - Tateishi, Y.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to K. Fujii, K. Kohno, K. Morimoto, M. Nakakubo, M. Shimada, K. Takakura, Y. Toquenaga and N. Watanabe for providing extra specimens for reference, and S. Kigawa and K. Nishimura for information on the distributions of legumes. Thanks also go to T. Kawarabata, H. Kuriyama, T. Yahara and J. Yukawa for sharing laboratory facilities and J. Badmin, G. Heimpel, G. Morse, K.A. Shufran and two anonymous referees for critical comments on the manuscript. This study was supported by Fujiwara Natural History Foundation, Sumitomo Foundation, and Grant-in-Aids for International Scientific Research (Field Research 09041145) and for Scientific Research (A)(08304049), (B)(14405003), and for Young Scientists (B)(15770011) from MESSC.
PY - 2004/2
Y1 - 2004/2
N2 - The genetic diversity of populations of the azuki bean beetle, Callosobruchus chinensis (Linnaeus) from natural, pre-harvest and post-harvest sites, was investigated to understand population structure and gene flow. A 522-bp fragment of the mitochondrial gene COI was sequenced for eight populations of C. chinensis from Japan, Korea and Taiwan collected from different habitats. Six haplotypes were detected, one of which, U1, occurred most frequently and widely. The following hypotheses were tested as a cause of the wide distribution of haplotype U1; (i) topographical separation (by national boundaries), (ii) host plant species, and (iii) habitat type (natural, pre-harvest crop, or post-harvest storage). Categorization of collection sites by country or by host species did not yield differences in the occurrence of haplotype U1, but habitat type did. Populations utilizing cultivated post-harvest hosts that were mass stored were highly likely to be the common haplotype, whereas host plants in natural habitats away from agriculture were utilized by populations with locally characteristic haplotypes. Sampling of commercial beans for quarantine and export purposes indicated that gene flow in C. chinensis was largely unidirectional into Japan at the present time.
AB - The genetic diversity of populations of the azuki bean beetle, Callosobruchus chinensis (Linnaeus) from natural, pre-harvest and post-harvest sites, was investigated to understand population structure and gene flow. A 522-bp fragment of the mitochondrial gene COI was sequenced for eight populations of C. chinensis from Japan, Korea and Taiwan collected from different habitats. Six haplotypes were detected, one of which, U1, occurred most frequently and widely. The following hypotheses were tested as a cause of the wide distribution of haplotype U1; (i) topographical separation (by national boundaries), (ii) host plant species, and (iii) habitat type (natural, pre-harvest crop, or post-harvest storage). Categorization of collection sites by country or by host species did not yield differences in the occurrence of haplotype U1, but habitat type did. Populations utilizing cultivated post-harvest hosts that were mass stored were highly likely to be the common haplotype, whereas host plants in natural habitats away from agriculture were utilized by populations with locally characteristic haplotypes. Sampling of commercial beans for quarantine and export purposes indicated that gene flow in C. chinensis was largely unidirectional into Japan at the present time.
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U2 - 10.1079/BER2003277
DO - 10.1079/BER2003277
M3 - Article
C2 - 14972052
AN - SCOPUS:1342311904
SN - 0007-4853
VL - 94
SP - 75
EP - 80
JO - Bulletin of Entomological Research
JF - Bulletin of Entomological Research
IS - 1
ER -