Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae)
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2014
Authors
Vidović, BiljanaJojić, Vida

Marić, Ivana
Marinković, Slavica

Hansen, Richard
Petanović, Radmila
Article (Published version)

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The russet mite, Aceria anthocoptes (Nalepa), is the only eriophyoid that has been recorded on Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop. It has been noted in several European countries and recently in the USA. In this study we explored the geographic and host-related variability of Aceria spp. inhabiting different Cirsium spp. We applied landmark-based geometric morphometric methods to study morphological variability of three body regions (ventral, coxigenital and prodorsal) of 13 Aceria spp. populations inhabiting five Cirsium spp. in Serbia (Europe) and four Cirsium spp. in Colorado (North America). Analyses of size and shape variation revealed statistically significant differences between Aceria spp. living on European native and North American native Cirsium spp., as well as between A. anthocoptes s.s. inhabiting European C. arvense and North American C. arvense. The coxigenital region was the most informative when considering inter-population shape differences. European Aceria spp. dwelling on C...irsium spp., including A. anthocoptes s.s. from C. arvense, are characterized by higher inter-population size and shape variability than their North American counterparts. This finding supports a Eurasian origin of A. anthocoptes, presumed to consist of a complex of cryptic taxa probably coevolved with host plants in the native environment. Morphological similarity among Aceria spp. inhabiting North American native Cirsium spp. may indicate that speciation of A. anthocoptes started relatively soon after the host shift to plants different from C. arvense in the invaded region.
Keywords:
Eriophyoid mites / Cirsium spp. / Geometric morphometrics / Serbia / Colorado / Inter-population variabilitySource:
Experimental and Applied Acarology, 2014, 64, 3, 321-335Publisher:
- Springer, Dordrecht
Funding / projects:
- Agrobiodiversity and land-use change in Serbia: an integrated biodiversity assessment of key functional groups of arthropods and plant pathogens (RS-43001)
- Genetic and phenetic diversity in natural populations across different environments - contribution of B chromosome polymorphism (RS-173003)
DOI: 10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4
ISSN: 0168-8162
PubMed: 24943490
WoS: 000342491000006
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84912014925
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IZBISTY - JOUR AU - Vidović, Biljana AU - Jojić, Vida AU - Marić, Ivana AU - Marinković, Slavica AU - Hansen, Richard AU - Petanović, Radmila PY - 2014 UR - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/313 AB - The russet mite, Aceria anthocoptes (Nalepa), is the only eriophyoid that has been recorded on Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop. It has been noted in several European countries and recently in the USA. In this study we explored the geographic and host-related variability of Aceria spp. inhabiting different Cirsium spp. We applied landmark-based geometric morphometric methods to study morphological variability of three body regions (ventral, coxigenital and prodorsal) of 13 Aceria spp. populations inhabiting five Cirsium spp. in Serbia (Europe) and four Cirsium spp. in Colorado (North America). Analyses of size and shape variation revealed statistically significant differences between Aceria spp. living on European native and North American native Cirsium spp., as well as between A. anthocoptes s.s. inhabiting European C. arvense and North American C. arvense. The coxigenital region was the most informative when considering inter-population shape differences. European Aceria spp. dwelling on Cirsium spp., including A. anthocoptes s.s. from C. arvense, are characterized by higher inter-population size and shape variability than their North American counterparts. This finding supports a Eurasian origin of A. anthocoptes, presumed to consist of a complex of cryptic taxa probably coevolved with host plants in the native environment. Morphological similarity among Aceria spp. inhabiting North American native Cirsium spp. may indicate that speciation of A. anthocoptes started relatively soon after the host shift to plants different from C. arvense in the invaded region. PB - Springer, Dordrecht T2 - Experimental and Applied Acarology T1 - Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae) EP - 335 IS - 3 SP - 321 VL - 64 DO - 10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4 ER -
@article{ author = "Vidović, Biljana and Jojić, Vida and Marić, Ivana and Marinković, Slavica and Hansen, Richard and Petanović, Radmila", year = "2014", abstract = "The russet mite, Aceria anthocoptes (Nalepa), is the only eriophyoid that has been recorded on Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop. It has been noted in several European countries and recently in the USA. In this study we explored the geographic and host-related variability of Aceria spp. inhabiting different Cirsium spp. We applied landmark-based geometric morphometric methods to study morphological variability of three body regions (ventral, coxigenital and prodorsal) of 13 Aceria spp. populations inhabiting five Cirsium spp. in Serbia (Europe) and four Cirsium spp. in Colorado (North America). Analyses of size and shape variation revealed statistically significant differences between Aceria spp. living on European native and North American native Cirsium spp., as well as between A. anthocoptes s.s. inhabiting European C. arvense and North American C. arvense. The coxigenital region was the most informative when considering inter-population shape differences. European Aceria spp. dwelling on Cirsium spp., including A. anthocoptes s.s. from C. arvense, are characterized by higher inter-population size and shape variability than their North American counterparts. This finding supports a Eurasian origin of A. anthocoptes, presumed to consist of a complex of cryptic taxa probably coevolved with host plants in the native environment. Morphological similarity among Aceria spp. inhabiting North American native Cirsium spp. may indicate that speciation of A. anthocoptes started relatively soon after the host shift to plants different from C. arvense in the invaded region.", publisher = "Springer, Dordrecht", journal = "Experimental and Applied Acarology", title = "Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae)", pages = "335-321", number = "3", volume = "64", doi = "10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4" }
Vidović, B., Jojić, V., Marić, I., Marinković, S., Hansen, R.,& Petanović, R.. (2014). Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae). in Experimental and Applied Acarology Springer, Dordrecht., 64(3), 321-335. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4
Vidović B, Jojić V, Marić I, Marinković S, Hansen R, Petanović R. Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae). in Experimental and Applied Acarology. 2014;64(3):321-335. doi:10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4 .
Vidović, Biljana, Jojić, Vida, Marić, Ivana, Marinković, Slavica, Hansen, Richard, Petanović, Radmila, "Geometric morphometric study of geographic and host-related variability in Aceria spp. (Acari: Eriophyoidea) inhabiting Cirsium spp. (Asteraceae)" in Experimental and Applied Acarology, 64, no. 3 (2014):321-335, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10493-014-9829-4 . .