Range‐wide population genomics of the spongy moth, Lymantria dispar (Erebidae): Implications for biosurveillance, subspecies classification and phylogeography of a destructive moth

Author:

Picq Sandrine1ORCID,Wu Yunke23ORCID,Martemyanov Vyacheslav V.45,Pouliot Esther1,Pfister Scott E.2,Hamelin Richard6ORCID,Cusson Michel17

Affiliation:

1. Laurentian Forestry Centre Natural Resources Canada Quebec Quebec City Canada

2. United States Department of Agriculture, APHIS, PPQ, Science and Technology Forest Pest Methods Laboratory Massachusetts Buzzards Bay USA

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Cornell University New York Ithaca USA

4. Institute of Systematics and Ecology of Animals SB RAS Novosibirsk Russia

5. Biological Institute National Research Tomsk State University Tomsk Russia

6. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences The University of British Columbia British Columbia Vancouver Canada

7. Département de biochimie, de microbiologie et de bio‐informatique Université Laval Quebec Quebec City Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe spongy moth, Lymantria dispar, is an irruptive forest pest native to Eurasia where its range extends from coast to coast and overspills into northern Africa. Accidentally introduced from Europe in Massachusetts in 1868–1869, it is now established in North America where it is considered a highly destructive invasive pest. A fine‐scale characterization of its population genetic structure would facilitate identification of source populations for specimens intercepted during ship inspections in North America and would enable mapping of introduction pathways to help prevent future incursions into novel environments. In addition, detailed knowledge of L. dispar's global population structure would provide new insight into the adequacy of its current subspecies classification system and its phylogeographic history. To address these issues, we generated >2000 genotyping‐by‐sequencing‐derived SNPs from 1445 contemporary specimens sampled at 65 locations in 25 countries/3 continents. Using multiple analytical approaches, we identified eight subpopulations that could be further partitioned into 28 groups, achieving unprecedented resolution for this species' population structure. Although reconciliation between these groupings and the three currently recognized subspecies proved to be challenging, our genetic data confirmed circumscription of the japonica subspecies to Japan. However, the genetic cline observed across continental Eurasia, from L. dispar asiatica in East Asia to L. d. dispar in Western Europe, points to the absence of a sharp geographical boundary (e.g., the Ural Mountains) between these two subspecies, as suggested earlier. Importantly, moths from North America and the Caucasus/Middle East displayed high enough genetic distances from other populations to warrant their consideration as separate subspecies of L. dispar. Finally, in contrast with earlier mtDNA‐based investigations that identified the Caucasus as L. dispar's place of origin, our analyses suggest continental East Asia as its evolutionary cradle, from where it spread to Central Asia and Europe, and to Japan through Korea.

Funder

Government of Canada

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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