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Avalos, Arian; Pan, Hailin; Li, Cai; Acevedo-Gonzalez, Jenny P.; Rendon, Gloria; Fields, Christopher J.; Brown, Patrick J.; Giray, Tugrul; Robinson, Gene E.; Hudson, Matthew E.; et al (, Nature Communications)
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Acevedo‐Gonzalez, Jenny P.; Galindo‐Cardona, Alberto; Avalos, Arian; Whitfield, Charles W.; Rodriguez, Dania M.; Uribe‐Rubio, Jose L.; Giray, Tugrul (, Ecology and Evolution)Abstract Honey bees (Apis melliferaL.) are the primary commercial pollinators across the world. The subspeciesA. m. scutellataoriginated in Africa and was introduced to the Americas in 1956. For the last 60 years, it hybridized successfully with European subspecies, previous residents in the area. The result of this hybridization was called Africanized honey bee (AHB). AHB has spread since then, arriving to Puerto Rico (PR) in 1994. The honey bee population on the island acquired a mosaic of features from AHB or the European honey bee (EHB). AHB in Puerto Rico shows a major distinctive characteristic, docile behavior, and is called gentle Africanized honey bees (gAHB). We used 917 SNPs to examine the population structure, genetic differentiation, origin, and history of range expansion and colonization of gAHB in PR. We compared gAHB to populations that span the current distribution ofA. melliferaworldwide. The gAHB population is shown to be a single population that differs genetically from the examined populations of AHB. Texas and PR groups are the closest genetically. Our results support the hypothesis that the Texas AHB population is the source of gAHB in Puerto Rico.more » « less
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