Applied Entomology and Zoology
Online ISSN : 1347-605X
Print ISSN : 0003-6862
ISSN-L : 0003-6862
Regular Papers
Genetic divergence among populations of the white grub beetle, Dasylepida ishigakiensis (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae), distributed in the southern part of the Ryukyu Islands of Japan, detected from mitochondrial DNA sequences
Masahiko MurajiYoshio HiraiToshiharu AkinoSadao WakamuraNorio Arakaki
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2008 年 43 巻 2 号 p. 287-292

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The white grub beetle, Dasylepida ishigakiensis, was originally known only in the Yaeyama region, including Ishigaki-jima and Iriomote-jima Islands, of the southern part of the Ryukyu Islands, Japan. At the end of the 1990s, a population was discovered to occur abundantly in sugarcane fields in the Miyako region, including Miyako-jima and Irabu-jima Islands, approximately 90 km northeast of the Yaeyama region. Using specimens collected from these islands, fragments of mitochondrial DNA containing portions of ribosomal RNA, cytochrome c oxidase subunit I, and cytochrome b genes were sequenced. Phylogenetic analyses using the sequences revealed discrete separation into three clades: two comprised exclusively of individuals from Ishigaki-jima and Iriomote-jima, respectively, and the third comprised of individuals from the Miyako region, including both Miyako-jima and Irabu-jima. Separation of the clades by rather long branches suggested that they have been geographically isolated for an evolutionarily long period and indicated that the population in the Miyako region was not established by the recent invasion of insects from the Yaeyama region.
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© 2008 by the Japanese Society of Applied Entomology and Zoology
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