Genetic analysis reveals Finnish Formica fennica populations do not form a separate genetic entity from F. exsecta

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Hakala , S M , Seppä , P , Heikkilä , M , Punttila , P , Sorvari , J & Helanterä , H 2018 , ' Genetic analysis reveals Finnish Formica fennica populations do not form a separate genetic entity from F. exsecta ' , PeerJ , vol. 6 , 6013 . https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6013

Title: Genetic analysis reveals Finnish Formica fennica populations do not form a separate genetic entity from F. exsecta
Author: Hakala, Sanja Maria; Seppä, Perttu; Heikkilä, Maria; Punttila, Pekka; Sorvari, Jouni; Helanterä, Heikki
Contributor organization: Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme
Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences
Tvärminne Zoological Station
Evolution, Sociality & Behaviour
Zoology
Finnish Museum of Natural History
Date: 2018-12-06
Language: eng
Number of pages: 23
Belongs to series: PeerJ
ISSN: 2167-8359
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6013
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/287692
Abstract: Coptoformica Muller, 1923 is a subgenus of Formica Linnaeus, 1758 that consists of c. a dozen species of ants that typically inhabit open grassy habitats and build small nest mounds. The most recent addition to the group is Formica fennica Seifert, 2000. The description was based on morphological characters, but the species status has not been confirmed by molecular methods. In this study, we use thirteen DNA microsatellite markers and a partial mitochondrial COI gene sequence to assess the species status of F. fennica, by comparing the genetic variation among samples identified as F. fennica and six other boreal Formica (Coptoformica) species. Most of the species studied form separate, discontinuous clusters in phylogenetic and spatial analyses with only little intraspecific genetic variation. However, both nuclear and mitochondrial markers fail to separate the species pair F. exsecta Nylander, 1846 and F. fennica despite established morphological differences. The genetic variation within the F. exsecta/fennica group is extensive, but reflects spatial rather than morphological differences. Finnish F. fennica populations studied so far should not be considered a separate species, but merely a morph of F. exsecta.
Subject: Species identification
Species delimitation
Hymenoptera
Coptoformica
Microsatelfites
Barcoding
ANTS HYMENOPTERA-FORMICIDAE
WOOD ANTS
MICROSATELLITE LOCI
PROGRAM STRUCTURE
SOUTHERN FINLAND
MITOCHONDRIAL
CONSEQUENCES
INFERENCE
TAXONOMY
DISTANCE
1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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