Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability

Populations of many bumblebee species are in decline, with distributions shifting northwards to track suitable climates. Climate change is considered a major contributing factor. Arctic species are particularly vulnerable as they cannot shift further north, making assessment of their population viab...

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Main Authors: Liu, Yuanzhen, Olsson, Anna, Larva, Tuuli, Cantwell-Jones, Aoife, Gill, Richard, Cederberg, Björn, Webster, Matthew
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1
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spelling crwinnower:10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1 2024-06-02T08:01:53+00:00 Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability Liu, Yuanzhen Olsson, Anna Larva, Tuuli Cantwell-Jones, Aoife Gill, Richard Cederberg, Björn Webster, Matthew 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1 unknown Authorea, Inc. posted-content 2023 crwinnower https://doi.org/10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1 2024-05-07T14:19:26Z Populations of many bumblebee species are in decline, with distributions shifting northwards to track suitable climates. Climate change is considered a major contributing factor. Arctic species are particularly vulnerable as they cannot shift further north, making assessment of their population viability important. Analysis of levels of whole-genome variation is a powerful way to analyse population declines and fragmentation. Here we use genome sequencing to analyse genetic variation in seven species of bumblebee from the Scandinavian mountains, including two classified as vulnerable. We sequenced 333 samples from across the ranges of these species in Sweden. Estimates of effective population size (NE) vary from ~55,000 for species with restricted high alpine distributions to 220,000 for more widespread species. Population fragmentation is generally very low or undetectable over large distances in the mountains, suggesting an absence of barriers to gene flow. The relatively high NE and low population structure indicate that none of the species are at immediate risk of negative genetic effects caused by high levels of genetic drift. However, reconstruction of historical fluctuations in NE indicates that the arctic specialist species Bombus hyperboreus has experienced population declines since the last ice age and we detected one highly inbred diploid male of this species close to the southern limit of its range, indicating elevated genetic load. Although levels of genetic variation in mountain bumblebee populations are currently relatively high, their ranges are predicted to shrink drastically due to the effects of climate change and monitoring is essential to detect future population declines. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Climate change The Winnower Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection The Winnower
op_collection_id crwinnower
language unknown
description Populations of many bumblebee species are in decline, with distributions shifting northwards to track suitable climates. Climate change is considered a major contributing factor. Arctic species are particularly vulnerable as they cannot shift further north, making assessment of their population viability important. Analysis of levels of whole-genome variation is a powerful way to analyse population declines and fragmentation. Here we use genome sequencing to analyse genetic variation in seven species of bumblebee from the Scandinavian mountains, including two classified as vulnerable. We sequenced 333 samples from across the ranges of these species in Sweden. Estimates of effective population size (NE) vary from ~55,000 for species with restricted high alpine distributions to 220,000 for more widespread species. Population fragmentation is generally very low or undetectable over large distances in the mountains, suggesting an absence of barriers to gene flow. The relatively high NE and low population structure indicate that none of the species are at immediate risk of negative genetic effects caused by high levels of genetic drift. However, reconstruction of historical fluctuations in NE indicates that the arctic specialist species Bombus hyperboreus has experienced population declines since the last ice age and we detected one highly inbred diploid male of this species close to the southern limit of its range, indicating elevated genetic load. Although levels of genetic variation in mountain bumblebee populations are currently relatively high, their ranges are predicted to shrink drastically due to the effects of climate change and monitoring is essential to detect future population declines.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Liu, Yuanzhen
Olsson, Anna
Larva, Tuuli
Cantwell-Jones, Aoife
Gill, Richard
Cederberg, Björn
Webster, Matthew
spellingShingle Liu, Yuanzhen
Olsson, Anna
Larva, Tuuli
Cantwell-Jones, Aoife
Gill, Richard
Cederberg, Björn
Webster, Matthew
Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
author_facet Liu, Yuanzhen
Olsson, Anna
Larva, Tuuli
Cantwell-Jones, Aoife
Gill, Richard
Cederberg, Björn
Webster, Matthew
author_sort Liu, Yuanzhen
title Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
title_short Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
title_full Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
title_fullStr Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
title_full_unstemmed Genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in Scandinavia: High levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
title_sort genomic variation in mountain bumblebees in scandinavia: high levels of intraspecific diversity despite population vulnerability
publisher Authorea, Inc.
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22541/au.169650397.75542404/v1
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