Darnis, M., Ravigné, V., Sauvion, N. (sous presse) Origin, divergence and migration routes of psyllids of the Cacopsylla pruni complex (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) inferred by approximate bayesian computation methods. Journal of Biogeography, e15177. DOI:10.1111/jbi.15177

Article / Origin, divergence and migration routes of psyllids of the Cacopsylla pruni complex (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) inferred by approximate bayesian computation methods

Darnis, M., Ravigné, V., Sauvion, N.

Darnis, M., Ravigné, V., Sauvion, N. (sous presse) Origin, divergence and migration routes of psyllids of the Cacopsylla pruni complex (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) inferred by approximate bayesian computation methods. Journal of Biogeography, e15177. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.15177

Résumé

Aim: Population genetics is essential to decipher the evolutionary history of pests and insect vectors from both a theoretical point of view and to predict and mitigate the future of epidemics. We attempt to shed light on the evolutionary history and phylogeography of two cryptic psyllid species (namely, A and B) of the Cacopsylla pruni complex, vectors of ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum’. The bacterium is known to cause the European stone fruit yellows (ESFY), a disease affecting Prunus trees and causing significant crop losses. Analyses were conducted to decipher the origin, order and time of divergence, as well as the migration routes of the species complex on the scale of their current distribution area.
Location: Western Palearctic.
Time Period: Late Tertiary (i.e., the Neogene: 23.030–2.588 Mya) to today.
Taxon: Psyllids, jumping plantlice.
Methods: Our study was conducted on a dataset of 97 geolocated sampling points, representing a total of 1245 individuals from all across the Western Palearctic. We used mitochondrial and nuclear gene data to infer the population genetic diversity and structure of the complex and to reconstruct a dated phylogenetic tree of the Psyllinae family in order to subsequently perform Approximate Bayesian Computation analyses.
Results: Both species have diverged in what is now France from a common ancestor, around 20.19 Mya, before expanding into Spain around 6.61 Mya for species A and Eastern Europe around 6.36 Mya for species B. Then species B seems to have moved to Corsica during the Messinian salinity crisis (5.96–5.33 Mya) from French or Italian B populations.
Main conclusions: No apparent admixture was found between both species after their divergence from France, which would indicate an absence of gene flow between them at the point when they recolonised common ecological niches. This strong genetic differentiation confirms previous work on reproductive barriers between the two species.

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Contact : DARNIS Margaux