Expanded view of the ecological genomics of ant responses to climate change
Expanded view of the ecological genomics of ant responses to climate change
ABSTRACT Ecological genomics provides a window into potential responses of organisms to environmental change. Given the abundance, broad distribution and diversity of roles that ants play in many ecosystems, they are an ideal group to serve as ecosystem indicators of climatic change. At present, only a few whole-genome sequences of ants are available (19 of > 16,000 species), mostly from tropical and sub-tropical regions. To address this, we sequenced the genomes of seven whole colonies of six species from the genus Aphaenogaster: A. ashmeadi, A. floridana, A. fulva, A. miamiana, A. picea, and A. rudis. The geographic ranges of these species collectively span eastern North America from southern Florida to southern Canada, which comprises a latitudinal gradient in which many climatic variables are changing rapidly. For the six genomes, we assembled an average of 271,039 contigs into 47,337 scaffolds. The mean genome size was 270 Mb, which was comparable to that of other sequenced ant genomes (212.83 to 396.03 Mb). Looking across all currently sequenced ant genomes, we found support for a relationship between genomic similarity and genome size biogeographic variables. The strongest correlations were between genomic similarity and cold temperatures and precipitation. These genomic data provide a point of departure for future work that explores genotypic and phenotypic responses of ants to climatic change.
Nguyen Andrew、Penick Clint、Dunn Robert、Cahan Sara Helms、DeMarco Bernice、Sanders Nathan J.、Ellison Aaron M.、Lau Matthew K.、Gotelli Nicholas J.
Department of Biology, University of Vermont||Department of Entomology and Nematology, University of FloridaDepartment of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State University||The Biomimicry Center, Arizona State UniversityDepartment of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State UniversityDepartment of Biology, University of VermontSmithsonian InstitutionEnvironmental Program, Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources, University of VermontHarvard Forest, Harvard UniversityHarvard Forest, Harvard UniversityDepartment of Biology, University of Vermont
环境科学理论环境科学技术现状生物科学现状、生物科学发展昆虫学
Nguyen Andrew,Penick Clint,Dunn Robert,Cahan Sara Helms,DeMarco Bernice,Sanders Nathan J.,Ellison Aaron M.,Lau Matthew K.,Gotelli Nicholas J..Expanded view of the ecological genomics of ant responses to climate change[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-08-02].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/302679.点此复制
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