The influence of interspecific competition and host preference on the phylogeography of two African ixodid tick species
Loading...
Date
Authors
Cangi, Nidia
Horak, Ivan Gerard
Apanaskevich, Dmitry A.
Matthee, Sonja
Das Neves, Luis Carlos Bernardo G.
Estrada-Pena, Agustín
Matthee, Conrad A.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
A comparative phylogeographic study on two economically important African tick species, Amblyomma hebraeum
and Hyalomma rufipes was performed to test the influence of host specificity and host movement on dispersion.
Pairwise AMOVA analyses of 277 mtDNA COI sequences supported significant population differentiation among the
majority of sampling sites. The geographic mitochondrial structure was not supported by nuclear ITS-2 sequencing,
probably attributed to a recent divergence. The three-host generalist, A. hebraeum, showed less mtDNA geographic
structure, and a lower level of genetic diversity, while the more host-specific H. rufipes displayed higher levels of
population differentiation and two distinct mtDNA assemblages (one predominantly confined to South Africa/Namibia
and the other to Mozambique and East Africa). A zone of overlap is present in southern Mozambique. A mechanistic
climate model suggests that climate alone cannot be responsible for the disruption in female gene flow. Our findings
furthermore suggest that female gene dispersal of ticks is more dependent on the presence of juvenile hosts in the
environment than on the ability of adult hosts to disperse across the landscape. Documented interspecific
competition between the juvenile stages of H. rufipes and H. truncatum is implicated as a contributing factor towards
disrupting gene flow between the two southern African H. rufipes genetic assemblages.
Description
Keywords
Phylogeography, African tick species, Amblyomma hebraeum, Hyalomma rufipes
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Cangi N, Horak IG, Apanaskevich DA, Matthee S, das Neves LCBG, et al. (2013) The Influence of Interspecific Competition and Host Preference on the Phylogeography of Two African Ixodid Tick Species. PLoS ONE 8(10): e76930. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076930