Abstract

The arrival to the United States of the Africanized honey bee, a hybrid between European subspecies and the African subspecies Apis mellifera scutellata, is a remarkable model for the study of biological invasions. This immigration has created an opportunity to study the dynamics of secondary contact of honey bee subspecies from African and European lineages in a feral population in South Texas. An 11‐year survey of this population (1991–2001) showed that mitochondrial haplotype frequencies changed drastically over time from a resident population of eastern and western European maternal ancestry, to a population dominated by the African haplotype. A subsequent study of the nuclear genome showed that the Africanization process included bidirectional gene flow between European and Africanized honey bees, giving rise to a new panmictic mixture of A. m. scutellata‐ and European‐derived genes. In this study, we examined gene flow patterns in the same population 23 years after the first hybridization event occurred. We found 28 active colonies inhabiting 92 tree cavities surveyed in a 5.14 km2 area, resulting in a colony density of 5.4 colonies/km2. Of these 28 colonies, 25 were of A. m. scutellata maternal ancestry, and three were of western European maternal ancestry. No colonies of eastern European maternal ancestry were detected, although they were present in the earlier samples. Nuclear DNA revealed little change in the introgression of A. m. scutellata‐derived genes into the population compared to previous surveys. Our results suggest this feral population remains an admixed swarm with continued low levels of European ancestry and a greater presence of African‐derived mitochondrial genetic composition.

Highlights

  • The Africanization of the honey bee (Apis mellifera) in North America represents a model of how an invasive population of a subspecies can interact with a resident population of a different subspecies to create a zone in which hybrid populations of a species complex can exist (Pinto et al 2005)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • The feral honey bee population at the Welder Wildlife Refuge (WWR) in South Texas represents a biological model of survival under adversity

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Summary

Introduction

The Africanization of the honey bee (Apis mellifera) in North America represents a model of how an invasive population of a subspecies can interact with a resident population of a different subspecies to create a zone in which hybrid populations of a species complex can exist (Pinto et al 2005). Africanized honey bees in the southern United States are derived from the sub-Saharan subspecies A. mellifera scutellata, which was introduced into. Brazil from South Africa in 1956 and crossbred with honey bees of European descent to create a hybrid that would better tolerate and thrive in a tropical environment (Kerr 1967). The success of Africanized honey bees in the Americas has been attributed to a combination of ecologi-.

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