Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Villacis A. G., Bustillos J. J., Depickere S., Sanchez D., Yumiseva C. A., Troya-Zuleta A., Barnabé Christian, Grijalva M. J., Brenière Simone Frédérique. (2020). Would tropical climatic variations impact the genetic variability of triatomines : Rhodnius ecuadoriensis, principal vector of Chagas disease in Ecuador ?. Acta Tropica, 209, p. art.105530 [9 p.]. ISSN 0001-706X.

Titre du document
Would tropical climatic variations impact the genetic variability of triatomines : Rhodnius ecuadoriensis, principal vector of Chagas disease in Ecuador ?
Année de publication
2020
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000557062200005
Auteurs
Villacis A. G., Bustillos J. J., Depickere S., Sanchez D., Yumiseva C. A., Troya-Zuleta A., Barnabé Christian, Grijalva M. J., Brenière Simone Frédérique
Source
Acta Tropica, 2020, 209, p. art.105530 [9 p.] ISSN 0001-706X
Rhodnius ecuadoriensis is one of the most important vector species of Chagas disease in Ecuador. This species is distributed in the Central coast region and in the south Andean region, and an incipient speciation process between these geographical populations was previously proposed. The current population genetics study only focused on the Central coast region and analyzed 96 sylvatic specimens of R. ecuadoriensis associated with Phytelephas aequatorialis palm trees. We used Cytb and 16S-rRNA sequences and a Cytb-16S-rRNA concatenated set to explore (i) the genetic variability, spatial structuring, and demographic history of R. ecuadoriensis, and to determine (ii) the relationship between the genetic and climatic variabilities. A particularly high genetic variability was observed without detectable general genetic structure; only some terminal genetic clusters were observed. We did not observe isolation by geographical distance (IBD), and it is likely that ancient expansion occurred, according to Fs index and mismatch distribution for Cytb-16S-rRNA concatenated sequences. Hierarchical clustering showed that the current locality origins of the bugs were grouped into four bioclimatic clusters. Genetic and bioclimatic distances were not correlated, but some genetic clusters were associated with bioclimatic ones. The results showed an ancient evolution of the species in the region with a possible old expansion. The absence of spatial genetic structure could be due to climatic conditions (possible selection of singular genotypes) and to passive transportation of palms tree materials where R. ecuadoriensis are living.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Description Géographique
EQUATEUR ; ANDES
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010079439]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010079439
Contact