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Molecular characteristics of Bombus (Alpinobombus) polaris from North Greenland with comments on its general biology and phylogeography

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Title
Molecular characteristics of Bombus (Alpinobombus) polaris from North Greenland with comments on its general biology and phylogeography
Other Titles
북그린란드 Bombus(Alpinobombus) polaris의 분자적 특성 및 일반적인 생물학과 계통지리학에 대한 논평
Authors
Namin, Saeed Mohamadzade
Park, Tae-Yoon
Jung, Chuleui
Meyer-Rochow, Victor Benno
Subject
Biodiversity & ConservationEnvironmental Sciences & Ecology
Keywords
Arctic pollinatorPolar insectsDNA extraction and sequencingHaplotypesPopulation relationships
Issue Date
2021-12
Citation
Namin, Saeed Mohamadzade, et al. 2021. "Molecular characteristics of Bombus (Alpinobombus) polaris from North Greenland with comments on its general biology and phylogeography". POLAR BIOLOGY, 44(12): 2209-2216.
Abstract
The bumble bee Bombus polaris (Curtis 1835) is known from the northernmost region of Greenland. But how it can survive there, where in terms of geographic origin it came from, and which species in addition to B. pyrrhopygus (Friese 1902) genetically it is most closely related to are insufficiently answered questions that have motivated us to carry out this study. On the basis of a molecular analysis of the cytochrome oxidase I gene of a B. (Alpinobombus) polaris from North Greenland (82 degrees 48 ' N; 42 degrees 14 ' W), we conclude that the female specimen we analysed was most closely related to the Canadian populations of B. polaris. Geographic proximity, occurrence of B. polaris on Ellesmere Island and wind direction are likely factors that have aided B. polaris to establish itself in northern and eastern Greenland. The presence of five haplotypes in the studied sequences from Greenland indicates a moderately high level of genetic diversity of B. polaris in Greenland, reflecting the successful adaptation of B. polaris populations. In the broader context of entomological life in the high Arctic, our results on B. polaris allow us to conclude that the survival of pollinating species in the high Arctic under the changing climate scenario depends not only on the weather but also on an individual's opportunity to continue to locate suitable food sources, i.e. pollen and nectar in the case of B. polaris. This aspect, briefly touched upon in this study, is of relevance not just to B. polaris, but the Arctic entomofauna generally.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/13549
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00300-021-02952-y
Type
Article
Station
기타()
Indexed
SCIE
Appears in Collections  
2021-2021, Advancement into unexplored areas of North Greenland through paleoenvironment and animal evolution research (21-21) / Park, Tae-Yoon S. (PE21060)
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