Abstract
Simple SummaryThe western honey bee is one of the most ecologically and economically important pollinator species. Due to human interference, it faces serious challenges, not only in number decline and habitat loss, but also in natural subspecies diversity and distribution. The conservation of genetic diversity and perseverance of locally adapted populations and subspecies becomes a crucial task in the face of rapid environmental changes. In order to further assess present genetic variability in Serbian honey bee populations, we analyzed 14 microsatellite loci and then compared nine of them with previously published data. Our results suggest that Serbia now harbors a distinct, relatively homogenous honey bee population, although some local differences are still preserved.Socioeconomic interests and beekeeper preferences have often taken precedence over the conservation of locally native honey bee subspecies, leading to the predominance of admixture populations in human-dominated areas. To assess the genetic diversity of contemporary managed Serbian honey bee colonies, we used 14 microsatellite loci and analyzed 237 worker bees from 46 apiaries in eight localities of northern and southern Serbia. Furthermore, we compared data for nine microsatellite loci with 338 individuals from Italy, Hungary, Poland, and Spain. The standard parameters of genetic diversity in Serbian honey bee populations were in line with other analyses, although somewhat smaller. STRUCTURE analysis showed the existence of two equally distributed genetic clusters and Analysis of molecular variances could not confirm the presence of a geographically discrete population but showed local differences. Discriminant analysis of principal components showed overlapping of worker bees from different parts of Serbia. Clear genetic differentiation can be observed when comparing all populations between geographical regions and their corresponding subspecies. The absence of the A. m. macedonica subspecies from its historical distribution range in southern Serbia as well as the lack of distinctive geographical groups suggest that selective breeding, queen import, and migratory beekeeping practices strongly influence the genetic structure and diversity of honey bees, leading to the genetic uniformization and creation of the admixture population.
Highlights
The western honey bee (Apis mellifera Linnaeus, 1758) is one of the species that is a subject of constant human interference
We compared our data for nine microsatellite loci with previously published data [58] for 338 individuals from Hungary, Poland, Spain, and Italy belonging to A. m. mellifera, A. m. carnica, A. m. iberiensis, A. m. ligustica, and the Buckfast hybrid
Analysis, we presume that all individuals in our sample belong to A. m. carnica [46,61]
Summary
The western honey bee (Apis mellifera Linnaeus, 1758) is one of the species that is a subject of constant human interference. 10,000 years ago, this species has never become truly domesticated despite all efforts, mainly due to its complex mating behavior [1–3]. The species’ native range of distribution in western Asia, Africa, and Europe was expanded to all other continents, except Antarctica, to regions marked by highly distinct ecological and climate conditions. A substantial body of evidence has confirmed that, deliberately or not, humans shape the current diversity of honey bees worldwide [4]. Since the classical Ruttner categorization of the A. mellifera subspecies [5], there has been an ongoing debate about its taxonomy, number of subspecies, distribution range, and origin due to the specificity of population structure, features of biology, and resolutions of honey bee subspecies discrimination methods. Based on the results of genomic analysis [6–9], it was proposed that this species originated in northern Africa or the Middle
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