Dergi makalesi Açık Erişim

The Genetic Polymorphisms and Colonization Process of Olive Fly Populations in Turkey

   Dogac, Ersin; Kandemir, Irfan; Taskin, Vatan

The olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae, is the most important pest of olives in olive growing regions worldwide, especially in the Mediterranean basin and North America. Despite the economic importance of the olive fly, the colonization route of this species is unclear. We used nuclear microsatellite markers and mitochondrial DNA to provide information about the population structure and invasion route of olive fly populations in Turkey, as representative of the Eastern Mediterranean region. Adult fly samples were collected from 38 sublocations covering all olive growing regions in Turkey. The simple sequence variability data revealed a significant genetic variability in olive fly populations and a certain degree of differentiation between Mediterranean and Aegean populations. Mediterranean populations harbor higher levels of microsatellite variation than Aegean populations, which points to the eastern part of the Mediterranean as the putative source of invasion. mtDNA results suggest olive flies from the western part of Turkey are closely related to Italo-Aegean flies of the Mediterranean basin and the olive fly populations have invaded the northern part of the Mediterranean basin through western Turkey. In addition, finding specific American haplotypes in high frequencies might indicate that Turkey is the possible source of American olive fly populations. In order to more precisely characterize the population structure and invasion routes of this organism, more DNA-based sequence analysis should be carried out worldwide.

Dosyalar (147 Bytes)
Dosya adı Boyutu
bib-4fbdd5fc-9313-45fc-93a7-7d27813b245c.txt
md5:e03e3dc90ef2aa7a7f7987309612f7b3
147 Bytes İndir
53
10
görüntülenme
indirilme
Görüntülenme 53
İndirme 10
Veri hacmi 1.5 kB
Tekil görüntülenme 48
Tekil indirme 10

Alıntı yap