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A soft selective sweep during rapid evolution of gentle behaviour in an Africanized honeybee.

Arián AvalosHailin PanCai LiJenny P Acevedo-GonzalezGloria RendonChristopher J FieldsPatrick J BrownTugrul GirayGene E RobinsonMatthew E HudsonGuojie Zhang
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
Highly aggressive Africanized honeybees (AHB) invaded Puerto Rico (PR) in 1994, displacing gentle European honeybees (EHB) in many locations. Gentle AHB (gAHB), unknown anywhere else in the world, subsequently evolved on the island within a few generations. Here we sequence whole genomes from gAHB and EHB populations, as well as a North American AHB population, a likely source of the founder AHB on PR. We show that gAHB retains high levels of genetic diversity after evolution of gentle behaviour, despite selection on standing variation. We observe multiple genomic loci with significant signatures of selection. Rapid evolution during colonization of novel habitats can generate major changes to characteristics such as morphological or colouration traits, usually controlled by one or more major genetic loci. Here we describe a soft selective sweep, acting at multiple loci across the genome, that occurred during, and may have mediated, the rapid evolution of a behavioural trait.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • genetic diversity
  • dna methylation
  • copy number
  • genome wide association study
  • genome wide association
  • amino acid