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Letters to Nature
Nature 339, 213 - 215 (18 May 1989); doi:10.1038/339213a0

Neotropical Africanized honey bees have African mitochondrial DNA

Deborah Roan Smith*†, Orley R Taylor & Wesley M. Brown

* Insect Division and Laboratory for Molecular Systematics, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA
Department of Entomology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045-2106, USA

NON-INDIGENOUS African honey bees have invaded most of South and Central America in just over 30 years1. The genetic composition of this population and the means by which it rapidly colonizes new territory remain controversial. In particular, it has been unclear whether this 'Africanized' population has resulted from interbreeding between African and domestic European bees, or is an essentially pure African population. Also, it has not been known whether this population expanded primarily by female or by male migration. Restriction site mapping of 62 mitochondrial DNAs of African bees from Brazil, Venezuela and Mexico reveals that 97% were of African (Apis mellifera scutellata) type. Although neotropical European apiary populations are rapidly Africanized by mating with neotropical African males, there is little reciprocal gene flow to the neotropical African population through European females. These are the first genetic data to indicate that the neotropical African population could be expanding its range by female migration.

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