Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees

Our grasp of biodiversity is fine-tuned through the process of revisionary taxonomy. If species do exist in nature and can be discovered with available techniques, then we expect these revisions to converge on broadly shared interpretations of species. But for the primarily arctic bumblebees of the...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Williams, Paul H., Byvaltsev, Alexandr M., Cederberg, Björn, Berezin, Mikhail V., Ødegaard, Frode, Rasmussen, Claus Nygaard, Richardson, Leif L., Huang, Jiaxing, Sheffield, Cory S., Williams, Suzanne T.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2373901
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544
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spelling ftninstnf:oai:brage.nina.no:11250/2373901 2023-05-15T13:20:28+02:00 Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees Williams, Paul H. Byvaltsev, Alexandr M. Cederberg, Björn Berezin, Mikhail V. Ødegaard, Frode Rasmussen, Claus Nygaard Richardson, Leif L. Huang, Jiaxing Sheffield, Cory S. Williams, Suzanne T. 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2373901 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544 eng eng Norges forskningsråd: 163059 PLoS ONE 2015 urn:issn:1932-6203 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2373901 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544 cristin:1311845 Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår 3.0 Norge http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/no/ CC-BY-SA 10 PLoS ONE 12 Journal article Peer reviewed 2015 ftninstnf https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544 2021-12-23T07:17:02Z Our grasp of biodiversity is fine-tuned through the process of revisionary taxonomy. If species do exist in nature and can be discovered with available techniques, then we expect these revisions to converge on broadly shared interpretations of species. But for the primarily arctic bumblebees of the subgenus Alpinobombus of the genus Bombus, revisions by some of the most experienced specialists are unusual for bumblebees in that they have all reached different conclusions on the number of species present. Recent revisions based on skeletal morphology have concluded that there are from four to six species,while variation in colour pattern of the hair raised questions as to whether at least seven species might be present. Even more species are supported if we accept the recent move away from viewing species as morphotypes to viewing them instead as evolutionarily independent lineages (EILs) using data from genes. EILs are recognised here in practice from the gene coalescents that provide direct evidence for their evolutionary independence. We show from fitting both general mixed Yule/coalescent (GMYC) models and Poisson-tree-process (PTP) models to data for the mitochondrial COI gene that there is support for nine species in the subgenus Alpinobombus. Examination of the more slowly evolving nuclear PEPCK gene shows further support for a previously unrecognised taxon as a new species in northwestern North America. The three pairs of the most morphologically similar sister species are separated allopatrically and prevented from interbreeding by oceans. We also find that most of the species show multiple shared colour patterns, giving the appearance of mimicry among parts of the different species. However, reconstructing ancestral colour-pattern states shows that speciation is likely to have cut across widespread ancestral polymorphisms, without or largely without convergence. In the particular case of Alpinobombus, morphological, colour-pattern, and genetic groups show little agreement, which may help to explain the lack of agreement among previous taxonomic revisions. Article in Journal/Newspaper ALPINOBOMBUS Arctic Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA Arctic PLOS ONE 10 12 e0144544
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Institute for Nature Research: Brage NINA
op_collection_id ftninstnf
language English
description Our grasp of biodiversity is fine-tuned through the process of revisionary taxonomy. If species do exist in nature and can be discovered with available techniques, then we expect these revisions to converge on broadly shared interpretations of species. But for the primarily arctic bumblebees of the subgenus Alpinobombus of the genus Bombus, revisions by some of the most experienced specialists are unusual for bumblebees in that they have all reached different conclusions on the number of species present. Recent revisions based on skeletal morphology have concluded that there are from four to six species,while variation in colour pattern of the hair raised questions as to whether at least seven species might be present. Even more species are supported if we accept the recent move away from viewing species as morphotypes to viewing them instead as evolutionarily independent lineages (EILs) using data from genes. EILs are recognised here in practice from the gene coalescents that provide direct evidence for their evolutionary independence. We show from fitting both general mixed Yule/coalescent (GMYC) models and Poisson-tree-process (PTP) models to data for the mitochondrial COI gene that there is support for nine species in the subgenus Alpinobombus. Examination of the more slowly evolving nuclear PEPCK gene shows further support for a previously unrecognised taxon as a new species in northwestern North America. The three pairs of the most morphologically similar sister species are separated allopatrically and prevented from interbreeding by oceans. We also find that most of the species show multiple shared colour patterns, giving the appearance of mimicry among parts of the different species. However, reconstructing ancestral colour-pattern states shows that speciation is likely to have cut across widespread ancestral polymorphisms, without or largely without convergence. In the particular case of Alpinobombus, morphological, colour-pattern, and genetic groups show little agreement, which may help to explain the lack of agreement among previous taxonomic revisions.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Williams, Paul H.
Byvaltsev, Alexandr M.
Cederberg, Björn
Berezin, Mikhail V.
Ødegaard, Frode
Rasmussen, Claus Nygaard
Richardson, Leif L.
Huang, Jiaxing
Sheffield, Cory S.
Williams, Suzanne T.
spellingShingle Williams, Paul H.
Byvaltsev, Alexandr M.
Cederberg, Björn
Berezin, Mikhail V.
Ødegaard, Frode
Rasmussen, Claus Nygaard
Richardson, Leif L.
Huang, Jiaxing
Sheffield, Cory S.
Williams, Suzanne T.
Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
author_facet Williams, Paul H.
Byvaltsev, Alexandr M.
Cederberg, Björn
Berezin, Mikhail V.
Ødegaard, Frode
Rasmussen, Claus Nygaard
Richardson, Leif L.
Huang, Jiaxing
Sheffield, Cory S.
Williams, Suzanne T.
author_sort Williams, Paul H.
title Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
title_short Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
title_full Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
title_fullStr Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
title_full_unstemmed Genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in Arctic Bumblebees
title_sort genes suggest ancestral colour polymorphisms are shared across morphologically cryptic species in arctic bumblebees
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2373901
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre ALPINOBOMBUS
Arctic
genre_facet ALPINOBOMBUS
Arctic
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op_relation Norges forskningsråd: 163059
PLoS ONE 2015
urn:issn:1932-6203
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2373901
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144544
cristin:1311845
op_rights Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår 3.0 Norge
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/no/
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