Global invasion history of the agricultural pest butterfly Pieris rapae revealed with genomics and citizen science

The small cabbage white butterfly, Pieris rapae, is a major agricultural pest of cruciferous crops and has been introduced to every continent except South America and Antarctica as a result of human activities. In an effort to reconstruct the near-global invasion history of P. rapae, we developed a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2019-10, Vol.116 (40), p.20015-20024
Hauptverfasser: Ryan, Sean F., Lombaert, Eric, Espeset, Anne, Vila, Roger, Talavera, Gerard, Dincă, Vlad, Doellman, Meredith M., Renshaw, Mark A., Eng, Matthew W., Hornett, Emily A., Li, Yiyuan, Pfrender, Michael E., Shoemaker, DeWayne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The small cabbage white butterfly, Pieris rapae, is a major agricultural pest of cruciferous crops and has been introduced to every continent except South America and Antarctica as a result of human activities. In an effort to reconstruct the near-global invasion history of P. rapae, we developed a citizen science project, the “Pieris Project,” and successfully amassed thousands of specimens from 32 countries worldwide. We then generated and analyzed nuclear (double-digest restriction site-associated DNA fragment procedure [ddRAD]) and mitochondrial DNA sequence data for these samples to reconstruct and compare different global invasion history scenarios. Our results bolster historical accounts of the global spread and timing of P. rapae introductions. We provide molecular evidence supporting the hypothesis that the ongoing divergence of the European and Asian subspecies of P. rapae (∼1,200 y B.P.) coincides with the diversification of brassicaceous crops and the development of human trade routes such as the Silk Route (Silk Road). The further spread of P. rapae over the last ∼160 y was facilitated by human movement and trade, resulting in an almost linear series of at least 4 founding events, with each introduced population going through a severe bottleneck and serving as the source for the next introduction. Management efforts of this agricultural pest may need to consider the current existence of multiple genetically distinct populations. Finally, the international success of the Pieris Project demonstrates the power of the public to aid scientists in collections-based research addressing important questions in invasion biology, and in ecology and evolutionary biology more broadly.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1907492116