Predominance of sexual reproduction in Romanian populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae inferred from phenotypic and genetic structure

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Abstract

Models of coexistence of sexual and asexual lineages in aphids assume that obligate parthenogenetic lineages predominate in areas with mild winter climate because of their high reproductive output, while sexual lineages predominate in areas with severe winter because they produce eggs resistant to frost. To validate this hypothesis in natural conditions, the reproductive mode of populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae was assessed in two very contrasting climatic situations, Romania (severe winter) and Western France (mild winter). To achieve this, reproductive modes were inferred from both (1) the population composition in sexual and asexual forms in autumn, and (2) the genetic structure of Romanian and French populations of S. avenae using microsatellite markers. Romanian populations encompassed a high proportion of sexual forms and were characterised by a very high genotypic diversity and low linkage disequilibrium. In constrast, the French population showed frequent linkage disequilibria, low genetic diversity, and high level of clonal amplification with two asexual genotypes representing over 60% of the sample. In agreement with the model's predictions, these results clearly indicate that sexual reproduction in S. avenae is predominant under the continental climate of Romania, while asexual lineages prevail under the oceanic climate of Western France.

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Papura, D., Simon, J. C., Halkett, F., Delmotte, F., Le Gallic, J. F., & Dedryver, C. A. (2003). Predominance of sexual reproduction in Romanian populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae inferred from phenotypic and genetic structure. Heredity, 90(5), 397–404. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.hdy.6800262

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