Abstract

Genetic variation of the white-spotted longicorn beetle Anoplophora spp., distributed on the Japanese mainland and the Ryukyu Islands, was examined using nucleotide sequences of mitochondrial DNA. Two fragments, a 1.2-kb-long fragment containing portions of the cytochrome oxidase subunit I and II genes and a 1.4-kb-long fragment containing portions of 16S and 12S rDNAs, were sequenced. In phylogenetic analyses based on the sequences, 294 individuals collected at 75 localities were divided into two major groups (groups A and B) and then split into seven subgroups (A1–A4 and B1–B3). In group A, the closely related subgroups A1, A2, and A3 were mainly distributed on the Japanese mainland and were roughly separated among geographic areas, although the range of A3 spread significantly from Kyushu to the Central Ryukyu Islands. The sequence of A4, detected from one individual collected in eastern Honshu, was almost the same as that reported for A. chinensis (Forster) on the Chinese continent. In group B, subgroups B1 and B2 were restricted to the Central and Southern Ryukyu Islands, respectively, while B3 was distributed widely in both regions. Based on the results, we discuss the geographic origin of the haplotypes and movement of the insects between geographic areas.

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