Abstract

Understanding genetic structure and diversity of insect vectors is crucial for disease epidemiology. In this study, mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I sequences were used to infer genetic diversity, genetic structure and population history of the black fly, Simulium chumpornense Takaoka and Kuvangkadilok, a suspected vector of blood protozoa of the genus Leucocytozoon and Trypanosoma. High intraspecific genetic divergence (max. 3.76%) was found among 142 specimens obtained from 19 locations across Thailand. A median joining network revealed two genetic lineages (A and B) that were geographically associated. Lineage A is representative of central and northeastern regions. Lineage B represents specimens from diverse locations in northern, western, and southern Thailand, including the type locality. Mismatch distribution and the neutrality tests provided signals of past population expansions in both lineages. The expansion time dating back to the end of last glaciations at 12,000 - 15,000 years ago is possibly related to increasing of precipitation at the end of last glacial period. Despite recent population history, population pairwise FST analysis revealed that almost all population comparisons were genetically significantly different. The high level of genetic structuring is possibly a result of historical isolation of the population that survived in different refugia sites during the dry conditions during glaciations.

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