@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19663,
author = {Florian M. Steiner and Bernhard Seifert and Donato A Grasso and Francesco Le Moli and Wolfgang Arthofer and Christian Stauffer and Ross H Crozier and Birgit C. Schlick-Steiner},
title = {Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Hybridisation, bidirectional interspecific gene flow, non-sister species, inference key},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Organisms Diversity and Evolution},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The Mediterranean harvester ant species Messor minor, M. cf. wasmanni, and M. capitatus can co-occur in the same habitat. In Italian populations, we encountered colonies that contained workers from more than one species as identified via standard morphology, as well as colonies with workers that appeared to be morphologically intermediate between species. This unusual finding required further analysis. We analysed such colonies using microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA and refined morphometrics, and a simple inference key for the colony-level interpretation of data from the three sources combined. We infer that Messor minor and M. cf. wasmanni engage in bidirectional interspecific gene flow. Hybrids between these two species are inferred to produce fertile offspring, which would indicate that barriers to hybridisation do not exist or can be completely overcome. This is unexpected, given that they are non-sister species and broadly sympatric in nature. Our findings also indicate that hybrid-hybrid crosses could occur which has been rarely observed in ants. We cautiously interpret the data at hand as in support of the interspecific gene flow considerably shaping the genetic makeup of populations, raising the question about a potential adaptive value of this hybridisation. Messor capitatus mixes with hybrids of the other two species, but we found no indication of hybridisation involving this species. We discuss various hypotheses on the causations of colony mixing and hybridisation in the three Messor species at the proximate and ultimate level.}
}
Citation for Study 11446

Citation title:
"Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)".

Study name:
"Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)".

This study is part of submission 11436
(Status: Published).
Citation
Steiner F., Seifert B., Grasso D.A., Le moli F., Arthofer W., Stauffer C., Crozier R.H., & Schlick-steiner B. 2011. Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Organisms Diversity and Evolution, .
Authors
-
Steiner F.
-
Seifert B.
-
Grasso D.A.
-
Le moli F.
-
Arthofer W.
-
Stauffer C.
-
Crozier R.H.
-
Schlick-steiner B.
Abstract
The Mediterranean harvester ant species Messor minor, M. cf. wasmanni, and M. capitatus can co-occur in the same habitat. In Italian populations, we encountered colonies that contained workers from more than one species as identified via standard morphology, as well as colonies with workers that appeared to be morphologically intermediate between species. This unusual finding required further analysis. We analysed such colonies using microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA and refined morphometrics, and a simple inference key for the colony-level interpretation of data from the three sources combined. We infer that Messor minor and M. cf. wasmanni engage in bidirectional interspecific gene flow. Hybrids between these two species are inferred to produce fertile offspring, which would indicate that barriers to hybridisation do not exist or can be completely overcome. This is unexpected, given that they are non-sister species and broadly sympatric in nature. Our findings also indicate that hybrid-hybrid crosses could occur which has been rarely observed in ants. We cautiously interpret the data at hand as in support of the interspecific gene flow considerably shaping the genetic makeup of populations, raising the question about a potential adaptive value of this hybridisation. Messor capitatus mixes with hybrids of the other two species, but we found no indication of hybridisation involving this species. We discuss various hypotheses on the causations of colony mixing and hybridisation in the three Messor species at the proximate and ultimate level.
Keywords
Hybridisation, bidirectional interspecific gene flow, non-sister species, inference key
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S11446
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref19663,
author = {Florian M. Steiner and Bernhard Seifert and Donato A Grasso and Francesco Le Moli and Wolfgang Arthofer and Christian Stauffer and Ross H Crozier and Birgit C. Schlick-Steiner},
title = {Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)},
year = {2011},
keywords = {Hybridisation, bidirectional interspecific gene flow, non-sister species, inference key},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Organisms Diversity and Evolution},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {The Mediterranean harvester ant species Messor minor, M. cf. wasmanni, and M. capitatus can co-occur in the same habitat. In Italian populations, we encountered colonies that contained workers from more than one species as identified via standard morphology, as well as colonies with workers that appeared to be morphologically intermediate between species. This unusual finding required further analysis. We analysed such colonies using microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA and refined morphometrics, and a simple inference key for the colony-level interpretation of data from the three sources combined. We infer that Messor minor and M. cf. wasmanni engage in bidirectional interspecific gene flow. Hybrids between these two species are inferred to produce fertile offspring, which would indicate that barriers to hybridisation do not exist or can be completely overcome. This is unexpected, given that they are non-sister species and broadly sympatric in nature. Our findings also indicate that hybrid-hybrid crosses could occur which has been rarely observed in ants. We cautiously interpret the data at hand as in support of the interspecific gene flow considerably shaping the genetic makeup of populations, raising the question about a potential adaptive value of this hybridisation. Messor capitatus mixes with hybrids of the other two species, but we found no indication of hybridisation involving this species. We discuss various hypotheses on the causations of colony mixing and hybridisation in the three Messor species at the proximate and ultimate level.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 19663
AU - Steiner,Florian M.
AU - Seifert,Bernhard
AU - Grasso,Donato A
AU - Le Moli,Francesco
AU - Arthofer,Wolfgang
AU - Stauffer,Christian
AU - Crozier,Ross H
AU - Schlick-Steiner,Birgit C.
T1 - Mixed colonies and hybridisation of Messor harvester ant species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
PY - 2011
KW - Hybridisation
KW - bidirectional interspecific gene flow
KW - non-sister species
KW - inference key
UR - http://dx.doi.org/
N2 - The Mediterranean harvester ant species Messor minor, M. cf. wasmanni, and M. capitatus can co-occur in the same habitat. In Italian populations, we encountered colonies that contained workers from more than one species as identified via standard morphology, as well as colonies with workers that appeared to be morphologically intermediate between species. This unusual finding required further analysis. We analysed such colonies using microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA and refined morphometrics, and a simple inference key for the colony-level interpretation of data from the three sources combined. We infer that Messor minor and M. cf. wasmanni engage in bidirectional interspecific gene flow. Hybrids between these two species are inferred to produce fertile offspring, which would indicate that barriers to hybridisation do not exist or can be completely overcome. This is unexpected, given that they are non-sister species and broadly sympatric in nature. Our findings also indicate that hybrid-hybrid crosses could occur which has been rarely observed in ants. We cautiously interpret the data at hand as in support of the interspecific gene flow considerably shaping the genetic makeup of populations, raising the question about a potential adaptive value of this hybridisation. Messor capitatus mixes with hybrids of the other two species, but we found no indication of hybridisation involving this species. We discuss various hypotheses on the causations of colony mixing and hybridisation in the three Messor species at the proximate and ultimate level.
L3 -
JF - Organisms Diversity and Evolution
VL -
IS -
ER -