Long-term spatio-temporal genetic structure of an accidental
introduction, and the population dynamics of its associated Wolbachia
symbiont
Abstract
Population bottlenecks associated with founder events strongly impact
the establishment and character of populations. Founding individuals
bring along symbionts, which can affect the host establishment, dynamics
and evolution. Thus, to understand introductions and invasions, we
should identify the roles played by accompanying symbionts. In 1991, a
parasitoid wasp and its associated hyperparasitoid were accidentally
introduced from the main Åland islands to an isolated island in the
archipelago, along with their host, the Glanville fritillary butterfly.
The species have persisted as small populations since. A strain of the
endosymbiotic bacterium Wolbachia has an intermediate prevalence across
the main Åland parasitoid population. The infection increases
susceptibility of the parasitoid to hyperparasitism. We investigated the
establishment and dynamics of the parasitoid, along with pattern of
prevalence of the symbiont using 324 specimens collected between 1992
and 2013, from five localities across Åland, including the source and
introduced populations. Using 14 microsatellites and one mitochondrial
marker, we suggest that occasional migration between the islands might
have facilitated the persistence of all isolated populations, despite
local population crashes. We also show local near-fixation of Wolbachia,
where the hyperparasitoid is absent, and selection against infected host
genotypes is relaxed.