Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands
Abstract Landscape structure, which can be manipulated in agricultural landscapes through crop rotation and modification of field edge habitats, can have important effects on connectivity among local populations of insects. Though crop rotation is known to influence the abundance of Colorado potato...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5489 |
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doaj-47161468d8964e1287b58cbc1bfd69af2021-03-02T09:50:36ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582019-08-019169385939410.1002/ece3.5489Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central SandsMichael S. Crossley0Silvia I. Rondon1Sean D. Schoville2Department of Entomology University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USADepartment of Crop & Soil Sciences, Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center Oregon State University Hermiston OR USADepartment of Entomology University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USAAbstract Landscape structure, which can be manipulated in agricultural landscapes through crop rotation and modification of field edge habitats, can have important effects on connectivity among local populations of insects. Though crop rotation is known to influence the abundance of Colorado potato beetle (CPB; Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say) in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) fields each year, whether crop rotation and intervening edge habitat also affect genetic variation among populations is unknown. We investigated the role of landscape configuration and composition in shaping patterns of genetic variation in CPB populations in the Columbia Basin of Oregon and Washington, and the Central Sands of Wisconsin, USA. We compared landscape structure and its potential suitability for dispersal, tested for effects of specific land cover types on genetic differentiation among CPB populations, and examined the relationship between crop rotation distances and genetic diversity. We found higher genetic differentiation between populations separated by low potato land cover, and lower genetic diversity in populations occupying areas with greater crop rotation distances. Importantly, these relationships were only observed in the Columbia Basin, and no other land cover types influenced CPB genetic variation. The lack of signal in Wisconsin may arise as a consequence of greater effective population size and less pronounced genetic drift. Our results suggest that the degree to which host plant land cover connectivity affects CPB genetic variation depends on population size and that power to detect landscape effects on genetic differentiation might be reduced in agricultural insect pest systems.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5489agroecosystemscrop rotationgenetic differentiationlandscape geneticspest management |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Michael S. Crossley Silvia I. Rondon Sean D. Schoville |
spellingShingle |
Michael S. Crossley Silvia I. Rondon Sean D. Schoville Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands Ecology and Evolution agroecosystems crop rotation genetic differentiation landscape genetics pest management |
author_facet |
Michael S. Crossley Silvia I. Rondon Sean D. Schoville |
author_sort |
Michael S. Crossley |
title |
Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands |
title_short |
Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands |
title_full |
Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands |
title_fullStr |
Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on Colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the Columbia Basin and Central Sands |
title_sort |
effects of contemporary agricultural land cover on colorado potato beetle genetic differentiation in the columbia basin and central sands |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Ecology and Evolution |
issn |
2045-7758 |
publishDate |
2019-08-01 |
description |
Abstract Landscape structure, which can be manipulated in agricultural landscapes through crop rotation and modification of field edge habitats, can have important effects on connectivity among local populations of insects. Though crop rotation is known to influence the abundance of Colorado potato beetle (CPB; Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say) in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) fields each year, whether crop rotation and intervening edge habitat also affect genetic variation among populations is unknown. We investigated the role of landscape configuration and composition in shaping patterns of genetic variation in CPB populations in the Columbia Basin of Oregon and Washington, and the Central Sands of Wisconsin, USA. We compared landscape structure and its potential suitability for dispersal, tested for effects of specific land cover types on genetic differentiation among CPB populations, and examined the relationship between crop rotation distances and genetic diversity. We found higher genetic differentiation between populations separated by low potato land cover, and lower genetic diversity in populations occupying areas with greater crop rotation distances. Importantly, these relationships were only observed in the Columbia Basin, and no other land cover types influenced CPB genetic variation. The lack of signal in Wisconsin may arise as a consequence of greater effective population size and less pronounced genetic drift. Our results suggest that the degree to which host plant land cover connectivity affects CPB genetic variation depends on population size and that power to detect landscape effects on genetic differentiation might be reduced in agricultural insect pest systems. |
topic |
agroecosystems crop rotation genetic differentiation landscape genetics pest management |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5489 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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