4.2 Article

Hitting the Road: Haplotype Diversity of Fire Ants Nesting on Disturbed Atlantic Forest Habitats

Journal

NEOTROPICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 584-595

Publisher

ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC BRASIL
DOI: 10.1007/s13744-023-01048-y

Keywords

Highway environmental impact; Myrmecology; Rain forest; Biodiversity; Taxonomy

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This study aims to evaluate the effect of human disturbances on the mitochondrial DNA haplotype diversity of S. saevissima ants in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. The results show that the species exhibits high haplotypes and nucleotide diversity in different habitats, but all haplotypes seem closely related across habitats. Haplotype H1 is exclusively found in nests by highway roadsides, and haplotype H7 is found on dust roads; other haplotypes are recorded from all habitats. Overall, human activities have a significant impact on the genetic diversity of this species.
Ants of the genus Solenopsis are globally distributed, presenting high diversity and many generalist species. In South America, the dominant species is Solenopsis saevissima (Smith, 1855), commonly found nesting in grassy fields surrounding humanized areas. In spite of being so common, there has been no research evaluating the effect of human disturbances on the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotype diversity in this species. In this context, we here characterized the mtDNA haplotype diversity in S. saevissima nests by highway roadsides, dust roads, and forest borders of Atlantic Forest, based on partial sequences of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI). Based on the facts that the species is a rapid colonizer of disturbed habitats, we specifically probed how the genetic diversity of native S. saevissima is impacted by highways and roads infrastructure expanding around the rainforest. Species diagnosis was established both by morphological characters and obtained mtDNA COI sequences. Overall, the species exhibited high haplotypes and nucleotide diversity, particularly around forest borders; though all haplotypes seemed closely related across the different habitats. We identified seven mitochondrial haplotypes (H1 to H7), where haplotype H1 was exclusively found in highway roadside nests, and H7 on dust roads; the remaining haplotypes were recorded from all habitats. Haplotype H1 was geographically isolated to the south of the Atlantic Forest, supporting previous suggestions that it acts as a biogeographical barrier. The pattern is suggestive of a recent species expansion, probably resulting from extensive habitat fragmentation. Taken together, our data demonstrates fire ant haplotypes prevailing in some anthropized habitats, characterizing how a native species lining the remnants of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest might be a concern for environmental conservation.

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