Kusza, Szilvia

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Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population

Tanasković, Marija; Erić, Pavle; Patenković, Aleksandra; Erić, Katarina; Mihajlović, Milica; Tanasić, Vanja; Kusza, Szilvia; Oleksa, Andrzej; Stanisavljević, Ljubiša; Davidović, Slobodan

(Basel: MDPI, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Tanasković, Marija
AU  - Erić, Pavle
AU  - Patenković, Aleksandra
AU  - Erić, Katarina
AU  - Mihajlović, Milica
AU  - Tanasić, Vanja
AU  - Kusza, Szilvia
AU  - Oleksa, Andrzej
AU  - Stanisavljević, Ljubiša
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4806
AB  - Socioeconomic interests and beekeeper preferences have often taken precedence over the conservation of locally native honey bee subspecies, leading to the predominance of admixture populations in human-dominated areas. To assess the genetic diversity of contemporary managed Serbian honey bee colonies, we used 14 microsatellite loci and analyzed 237 worker bees from 46 apiaries in eight localities of northern and southern Serbia. Furthermore, we compared data for nine microsatellite loci with 338 individuals from Italy, Hungary, Poland, and Spain. The standard parameters of genetic diversity in Serbian honey bee populations were in line with other analyses, although somewhat smaller. STRUCTURE analysis showed the existence of two equally distributed genetic clusters and Analysis of molecular variances could not confirm the presence of a geographically discrete population but showed local differences. Discriminant analysis of principal components showed overlapping of worker bees from different parts of Serbia. Clear genetic differentiation can be observed when comparing all populations between geographical regions and their corresponding subspecies. The absence of the A. m. macedonica subspecies from its historical distribution range in southern Serbia as well as the lack of distinctive geographical groups suggest that selective breeding, queen import, and migratory beekeeping practices strongly influence the genetic structure and diversity of honey bees, leading to the genetic uniformization and creation of the admixture population.
PB  - Basel: MDPI
T2  - Insects
T1  - Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population
IS  - 2
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.3390/insects13020180
SP  - 180
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Tanasković, Marija and Erić, Pavle and Patenković, Aleksandra and Erić, Katarina and Mihajlović, Milica and Tanasić, Vanja and Kusza, Szilvia and Oleksa, Andrzej and Stanisavljević, Ljubiša and Davidović, Slobodan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Socioeconomic interests and beekeeper preferences have often taken precedence over the conservation of locally native honey bee subspecies, leading to the predominance of admixture populations in human-dominated areas. To assess the genetic diversity of contemporary managed Serbian honey bee colonies, we used 14 microsatellite loci and analyzed 237 worker bees from 46 apiaries in eight localities of northern and southern Serbia. Furthermore, we compared data for nine microsatellite loci with 338 individuals from Italy, Hungary, Poland, and Spain. The standard parameters of genetic diversity in Serbian honey bee populations were in line with other analyses, although somewhat smaller. STRUCTURE analysis showed the existence of two equally distributed genetic clusters and Analysis of molecular variances could not confirm the presence of a geographically discrete population but showed local differences. Discriminant analysis of principal components showed overlapping of worker bees from different parts of Serbia. Clear genetic differentiation can be observed when comparing all populations between geographical regions and their corresponding subspecies. The absence of the A. m. macedonica subspecies from its historical distribution range in southern Serbia as well as the lack of distinctive geographical groups suggest that selective breeding, queen import, and migratory beekeeping practices strongly influence the genetic structure and diversity of honey bees, leading to the genetic uniformization and creation of the admixture population.",
publisher = "Basel: MDPI",
journal = "Insects",
title = "Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population",
number = "2",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.3390/insects13020180",
pages = "180"
}
Tanasković, M., Erić, P., Patenković, A., Erić, K., Mihajlović, M., Tanasić, V., Kusza, S., Oleksa, A., Stanisavljević, L.,& Davidović, S.. (2022). Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population. in Insects
Basel: MDPI., 13(2), 180.
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13020180
Tanasković M, Erić P, Patenković A, Erić K, Mihajlović M, Tanasić V, Kusza S, Oleksa A, Stanisavljević L, Davidović S. Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population. in Insects. 2022;13(2):180.
doi:10.3390/insects13020180 .
Tanasković, Marija, Erić, Pavle, Patenković, Aleksandra, Erić, Katarina, Mihajlović, Milica, Tanasić, Vanja, Kusza, Szilvia, Oleksa, Andrzej, Stanisavljević, Ljubiša, Davidović, Slobodan, "Further Evidence of Population Admixture in the Serbian Honey Bee Population" in Insects, 13, no. 2 (2022):180,
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13020180 . .
2
4
3

Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population"

Tanasković, Marija; Erić, Pavle; Patenković, Aleksandra; Erić, Katarina; Mihajlović, Milica; Tanasić, Vanja; Kusza, Szilvia; Oleksa, Andzrej; Stanisavljević, Ljubiša; Davidović, Slobodan

(2022)

TY  - DATA
AU  - Tanasković, Marija
AU  - Erić, Pavle
AU  - Patenković, Aleksandra
AU  - Erić, Katarina
AU  - Mihajlović, Milica
AU  - Tanasić, Vanja
AU  - Kusza, Szilvia
AU  - Oleksa, Andzrej
AU  - Stanisavljević, Ljubiša
AU  - Davidović, Slobodan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4779
AB  - Figure S1. 3D plot demonstrating genetic variability analyzed using DAPC method based on the data from 14 microsatellite loci (A7, A8, A14, A24, A28, A35, A43, A79, A88, A107, A113, Ap43, Ap249 and B124) for managed honey bees (Apis mellifera) colonies originating from stationary apiaries and 8 different localities from the North (Fruška gora, Deliblatska peščara, Vršac, Subotica) and South (Leskovac, Tromeđa, Vlasina, Stara planina) parts of Serbia. In figure S1 the first three principal components (PC) are presented.
Figure S7. 3D plot demonstrating genetic variability analyzed using DAPC method based on the data from 9 microsatellite loci (A7, A14, A24, A28, A35, A43, A88, A107 and A113) for managed honey bees (Apis mellifera) colonies originating from stationary apiaries and 8 different localities from the North (Fruška gora, Deliblatska peščara, Vršac, Subotica) and South (Leskovac, Tromeđa, Vlasina, Stara planina) parts of Serbia and four different European countries (Spain, Italy, Poland and Hungary). In this figure four different A. mellifera species are presented as well: A. m. iberica from Spain, A. m. ligustica from Italy, A. m. mellifera from Poland, A. m. carnica from Hungary, Poland and Serbia. In figure S7 the first three principal components (PC) are presented.
T2  - Insects
T1  - Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population"
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4779
ER  - 
@misc{
author = "Tanasković, Marija and Erić, Pavle and Patenković, Aleksandra and Erić, Katarina and Mihajlović, Milica and Tanasić, Vanja and Kusza, Szilvia and Oleksa, Andzrej and Stanisavljević, Ljubiša and Davidović, Slobodan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Figure S1. 3D plot demonstrating genetic variability analyzed using DAPC method based on the data from 14 microsatellite loci (A7, A8, A14, A24, A28, A35, A43, A79, A88, A107, A113, Ap43, Ap249 and B124) for managed honey bees (Apis mellifera) colonies originating from stationary apiaries and 8 different localities from the North (Fruška gora, Deliblatska peščara, Vršac, Subotica) and South (Leskovac, Tromeđa, Vlasina, Stara planina) parts of Serbia. In figure S1 the first three principal components (PC) are presented.
Figure S7. 3D plot demonstrating genetic variability analyzed using DAPC method based on the data from 9 microsatellite loci (A7, A14, A24, A28, A35, A43, A88, A107 and A113) for managed honey bees (Apis mellifera) colonies originating from stationary apiaries and 8 different localities from the North (Fruška gora, Deliblatska peščara, Vršac, Subotica) and South (Leskovac, Tromeđa, Vlasina, Stara planina) parts of Serbia and four different European countries (Spain, Italy, Poland and Hungary). In this figure four different A. mellifera species are presented as well: A. m. iberica from Spain, A. m. ligustica from Italy, A. m. mellifera from Poland, A. m. carnica from Hungary, Poland and Serbia. In figure S7 the first three principal components (PC) are presented.",
journal = "Insects",
title = "Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population"",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4779"
}
Tanasković, M., Erić, P., Patenković, A., Erić, K., Mihajlović, M., Tanasić, V., Kusza, S., Oleksa, A., Stanisavljević, L.,& Davidović, S.. (2022). Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population". in Insects.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4779
Tanasković M, Erić P, Patenković A, Erić K, Mihajlović M, Tanasić V, Kusza S, Oleksa A, Stanisavljević L, Davidović S. Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population". in Insects. 2022;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4779 .
Tanasković, Marija, Erić, Pavle, Patenković, Aleksandra, Erić, Katarina, Mihajlović, Milica, Tanasić, Vanja, Kusza, Szilvia, Oleksa, Andzrej, Stanisavljević, Ljubiša, Davidović, Slobodan, "Supplementary material "Further evidence of population admixture in the Serbian honey bee population"" in Insects (2022),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_4779 .