Urbanization-associated range expansion genetically homogenizes a butterfly species

Curr Biol. 2024 Oct 7;34(19):4589-4595.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.09.006. Epub 2024 Sep 24.

Abstract

Human-induced environmental change and globalization facilitate biological invasions, which can lead to the displacement of native species by non-native ones.1,2,3,4 Analogously, biodiversity loss may occur within species when habitat modifications facilitate the expansion of a specific population's range, leading to genetic admixture with native local populations. We demonstrate such intraspecific loss in population-level diversity in the Southern Small White (Pieris mannii), an originally sedentary butterfly5 that recently expanded its range across Central Europe due to urbanization.6,7,8 Using genome-wide markers from historical museum specimens and contemporary samples, we identify a distinct population initiating this expansion and reveal the genetic homogenization of native local populations by admixture with the expansive one. Our study illustrates how human-made environmental change can simultaneously benefit a species by permitting range expansion and drive cryptic biodiversity loss through the genetic homogenization of conspecific populations.

Keywords: Pieris mannii; admixture; anthropogenic environmental change; biological invasion; genetic diversity; lepidoptera; museomics; population genomics; urban habitat.

Publication types

  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Animal Distribution
  • Animals
  • Biodiversity
  • Butterflies* / genetics
  • Ecosystem
  • Europe
  • Genetic Variation
  • Urbanization*