4.5 Article

Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Genetic Diversity and Structure in Danish Populations of the Alcon Blue Butterfly Phengaris alcon (Denis & Schiffermuller)

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d14121098

Keywords

population genetics; Lycaenidae; post-glacial expansion; isolation by distance

Funding

  1. Danish Ministry for Culture (KFU) [FORM.2017-0006]
  2. Schjtz-Christensen Memorial Fund, Aarhus, Denmark

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Phengaris alcon, an endangered butterfly associated with ants, has experienced a severe decline in Denmark. This study analyzed DNA microsatellite data to explore the population structure and decline of P. alcon in Denmark. The results revealed current genetic clusters and signs of inbreeding in extant populations. The study also suggested hypotheses about the colonization history of P. alcon in Denmark and the genetic signature of a specific population.
Phengaris alcon is an endangered, ant-associated butterfly found, amongst other places, in Denmark, where it has undergone a severe decline during the last century. However, the population genetic consequences of this decline remain unknown. To explore past and current patterns in population structure in relation to the decline, we analyzed DNA microsatellite data from 184 recent and 272 historical P. alcon specimens from 44 spatiotemporal locations in Denmark. We thus generated the most temporally and spatially comprehensive population genetic dataset for P. alcon in Denmark so far. Our results for the Bayesian population assignment of recent samples revealed three major current genetic clusters: western Jutland, northern Jutland, and the island of L AE so. Estimates of genetic diversity showed signs of inbreeding in several extant populations. When including data from museum specimens, only a single locatSion showed a decline in heterozygosity between 1967 and 2021. We suggest that the two distinct clusters in western and northern Jutland indicate two temporally separated Holocene colonizations of Denmark, the latter of which may have been aided by changes in agricultural practice in the late Neolithic period. The unique genetic signature of the L AE so populations may be a result of the admixture of northern Jutland and western Swedish populations.

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