Abstract
Western honey bees (Apis mellifera) are one of the most important pollinators of agricultural crops and wild plants. Despite the growth in the availability of sequence data for honey bees, the phylogeny of the species remains a subject of controversy. Most notably, the geographic origin of honey bees is uncertain, as are the relationships among its constituent lineages and subspecies. We aim to infer the evolutionary and biogeographical history of the honey bee from mitochondrial genomes. Here we analyse the full mitochondrial genomes of 18 A. mellifera subspecies, belonging to all major lineages, using a range of gene sampling strategies and inference models to identify factors that may have contributed to the recovery of incongruent results in previous studies. Our analyses support a northern African or Middle Eastern origin of A. mellifera. We show that the previously suggested European and Afrotropical cradles of honey bees are the result of phylogenetic error. Monophyly of the M, C, and O lineages is strongly supported, but the A lineage appears paraphyletic. A. mellifera colonised Europe through at least two pathways, across the Strait of Gibraltar and via Asia Minor.
Highlights
Western honey bees (Apis mellifera) are one of the most important pollinators of agricultural crops and wild plants
Given that all other living species of the genus Apis occur in Asia, the idea that A. mellifera may have originally dispersed from the east has enjoyed lasting popularity since the 1 950s1,35–38
All mitochondrial genomes of A. mellifera sequenced to date were obtained from GenBank in January 2020 alongside with the mitochondrial genomes of A. cerana, A. florea, and A. dorsata, which were used as outgroups
Summary
Western honey bees (Apis mellifera) are one of the most important pollinators of agricultural crops and wild plants. We analyse the full mitochondrial genomes of 18 A. mellifera subspecies, belonging to all major lineages, using a range of gene sampling strategies and inference models to identify factors that may have contributed to the recovery of incongruent results in previous studies. Our analyses support a northern African or Middle Eastern origin of A. mellifera. The Western honey bee has been divided into four evolutionary lineages: the A lineage (subspecies native to Africa), the M lineage (western and northern Europe), the C lineage (southern and eastern Europe), and the O lineage (Caucasus, Turkey, Middle East, Cyprus, Crete) based on morphometric and molecular d ata[2,6,41,42,43]. Some studies do not recognise the distinction between the C and O lineages[21,38,47]
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