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Featured researches published by Mauro Simonato.


BMC Genomics | 2008

The complete mitochondrial genome of the bag-shelter moth Ochrogaster lunifer (Lepidoptera, Notodontidae)

Paola Salvato; Mauro Simonato; Andrea Battisti; Enrico Negrisolo

BackgroundKnowledge of animal mitochondrial genomes is very important to understand their molecular evolution as well as for phylogenetic and population genetic studies. The Lepidoptera encompasses more than 160,000 described species and is one of the largest insect orders. To date only nine lepidopteran mitochondrial DNAs have been fully and two others partly sequenced. Furthermore the taxon sampling is very scant. Thus advance of lepidopteran mitogenomics deeply requires new genomes derived from a broad taxon sampling. In present work we describe the mitochondrial genome of the moth Ochrogaster lunifer.ResultsThe mitochondrial genome of O. lunifer is a circular molecule 15593 bp long. It includes the entire set of 37 genes usually present in animal mitochondrial genomes. It contains also 7 intergenic spacers. The gene order of the newly sequenced genome is that typical for Lepidoptera and differs from the insect ancestral type for the placement of trnM. The 77.84% A+T content of its α strand is the lowest among known lepidopteran genomes. The mitochondrial genome of O. lunifer exhibits one of the most marked C-skew among available insect Pterygota genomes. The protein-coding genes have typical mitochondrial start codons except for cox1 that present an unusual CGA. The O. lunifer genome exhibits the less biased synonymous codon usage among lepidopterans. Comparative genomics analysis study identified atp6, cox1, cox2 as cox3, cob, nad1, nad2, nad4, and nad5 as potential markers for population genetics/phylogenetics studies. A peculiar feature of O. lunifer mitochondrial genome it that the intergenic spacers are mostly made by repetitive sequences.ConclusionThe mitochondrial genome of O. lunifer is the first representative of superfamily Noctuoidea that account for about 40% of all described Lepidoptera. New genome shares many features with other known lepidopteran genomes. It differs however for its low A+T content and marked C-skew. Compared to other lepidopteran genomes it is less biased in synonymous codon usage. Comparative evolutionary analysis of lepidopteran mitochondrial genomes allowed the identification of previously neglected coding genes as potential phylogenetic markers. Presence of repetitive elements in intergenic spacers of O. lunifer genome supports the role of DNA slippage as possible mechanism to produce spacers during replication.


Molecular Ecology | 2006

Demographic history and population structure of the Antarctic silverfish Pleuragramma antarcticum.

Lorenzo Zane; Stefania Marcato; Luca Bargelloni; Erica Bortolotto; Chiara Papetti; Mauro Simonato; Vittorio Varotto; Tomaso Patarnello

The Antarctic silverfish Pleuragramma antarcticum (Nototheniidae) is the most abundant pelagic fish inhabiting Antarctic waters. In this study we investigated, through partial sequencing of the D‐loop mitochondrial region, samples collected at four different locations in the Southern Ocean, three in the Atlantic and one in the Pacific sector. Sampling was replicated in two different years at two locations. Sequence analysis showed a remarkably high polymorphism, with 110 haplotypes over the 256 investigated specimens, and about 80% of haplotypes occurring only once. Neutrality tests indicated that all samples were not at mutation–drift equilibrium, and suggested a past population expansion. This result was supported by the presence of a star‐like topology in the D‐loop gene tree, and by results of mismatch distribution. The start of the expansion was dated, using a specifically calibrated clock, between 111 and 126 thousand years ago. This value corresponds to the start of the cooling period that led to the last glaciation peak, and is in close agreement with a recently suggested range expansion for pelagic Antarctic ecosystems. Analysis of molecular variation indicated a small, though highly significant, value of differentiation between samples. This result, together with the lack of association between clades and geographical locations, indicates a weak population structure for the species.


Molecular Ecology | 2007

Phylogeography of the pine processionary moth Thaumetopoea wilkinsoni in the Near East

Mauro Simonato; Zvi Mendel; Carole Kerdelhué; Jérôme Rousselet; Emmanuelle Magnoux; Paola Salvato; Alain Roques; Andrea Battisti; Lorenzo Zane

Phylogeographic structure of the eastern pine processionary moth Thaumetopoea wilkinsoni was explored in this study by means of nested clade phylogeographic analyses of COI and COII sequences of mitochondrial DNA and Bayesian estimates of divergence times. Intraspecific relationships were inferred and hypotheses tested to understand historical spread patterns and spatial distribution of genetic variation. Analyses revealed that all T. wilkinsoni sequences were structured in three clades, which were associated with two major biogeographic events, the colonization of the island of Cyprus and the separation of southwestern and southeastern Anatolia during the Pleistocene. Genetic variation in populations of T. wilkinsoni was also investigated using amplified fragment length polymorphisms and four microsatellite loci. Contrasting nuclear with mitochondrial data revealed recurrent gene flow between Cyprus and the mainland, related to the long‐distance male dispersal. In addition, a reduction in genetic variability was observed at both mitochondrial and nuclear markers at the expanding boundary of the range, consistent with a recent origin of these populations, founded by few individuals expanding from nearby localities. In contrast, several populations fixed for one single mitochondrial haplotype showed no reduction in nuclear variability, a pattern that can be explained by recurrent male gene flow or selective sweeps at the mitochondrial level. The use of both mitochondrial and nuclear markers was essential in understanding the spread patterns and the population genetic structure of T. wilkinsoni, and is recommended to study colonizing species characterized by sex‐biased dispersal.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Host and phenology shifts in the evolution of the social moth genus Thaumetopoea.

Mauro Simonato; Andrea Battisti; Carole Kerdelhué; Christian Burban; Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde; Isabelle Pivotto; Paola Salvato; Enrico Negrisolo

The genus Thaumetopoea contains the processionary moths, a group of lepidopteran associated with forest trees, well known for the social behaviour of the larvae and for carrying urticating setae. The taxonomy of the genus is partly unresolved and a phylogenetic approach is lacking. The goal of this work is to produce a phylogeny for Thaumetopoea and to identify the main traits driving the evolution of this group. Eighteen mitochondrial and three nuclear genes were fully/partly sequenced. Markers were aligned and analysed singularly or in various combinations. Phylogenetic analyses were performed according to maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference methods. Trees obtained from largest data sets provided identical topologies that received strong statistical support. Three main clades were identified within Thaumetopoea and were further supported by several signatures located in the mitochondrial tRNAs and intergenic spacers. The reference topology was used to investigate the evolution of life history traits related to biogeography, host plant, ecology, and morphology. A multigenic approach allowed to produce a robust phylogenetic analysis of the genus Thaumetopoea, with the identification of three major clades linked to different ecological and life history traits. The first clade is associated with Angiosperm host plants and has a fast spring development of larvae on young foliage. The other clades have originated by one event of host plant shift to Gymnosperm Pinaceae, which implied a longer larval developmental time due to the lower nutritional quality of leaves. These clades showed different adaptations to such a constraint, the first with a switch of larval feeding to cold season (winter pine processionary moths), and the second with a retraction to high altitude and latitude and a development cycle extended over two years (summer pine processionary moths). Recent global warming is affecting all species and seems able to further shape the evolution of the group.


Archive | 2015

Natural History of the Processionary Moths (Thaumetopoea spp.): New Insights in Relation to Climate Change

Andrea Battisti; Mustafa Avcı; Dimitrios N. Avtzis; Mohamed Lahbib Ben Jamaa; Laura Berardi; Wahiba Berretima; Manuela Branco; Gahdab Chakali; Moulay Ahmed El Alaoui El Fels; Brigitte Frérot; José A. Hódar; Irina Ionescu-Mălăncuş; Kahraman İpekdal; Stig Larsson; Traian Manole; Zvi Mendel; Nicolas Meurisse; Plamen Mirchev; Nabil Nemer; Maria-Rosa Paiva; Juan Pino; Alex Protasov; Noureddine Rahim; Jérôme Rousselet; Helena Santos; Daniel Sauvard; Axel Schopf; Mauro Simonato; Annie Yart; Mohamed Zamoum

It is difficult to find a genus of Lepidoptera showing the high variability of life history traits observed in Thaumetopoea. There are typical summer feeding close to winter feeding species, and in one special case a recent switch has been detected even within one species, the pine processionary moth, indicating that the natural history traits are constantly evolving at a fast rate. There are species adapted to cold conditions of high mountains and high latitude close to truly Mediterranean and sub-desert region species. All species have gregarious behaviour as larva and are protected against vertebrate predators by urticating setae.


Agricultural and Forest Entomology | 2005

Do sexual pheromone traps provide biased information of the local gene pool in the pine processionary moth

Paola Salvato; Mauro Simonato; Lorenzo Zane; Tomaso Patarnello; Luigi Masutti; Andrea Battisti

Abstract  1 Sexual pheromone traps are commonly used to monitor populations of the pine processionary moth, Thaumetopoea pityocampa, assuming that trapped males are representative of the breeding population.


Frontiers in Zoology | 2011

Restricted gene flow at the micro- and macro- geographical scale in marble trout based on mtDNA and microsatellite polymorphism

Jose Martin Pujolar; Alvise N. Lucarda; Mauro Simonato; Tomaso Patarnello

BackgroundThe genetic structure of the marble trout Salmo trutta marmoratus, an endemic salmonid of northern Italy and the Balkan peninsula, was explored at the macro- and micro-scale level using a combination of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and microsatellite data.ResultsSequence variation in the mitochondrial control region showed the presence of nonindigenous haplotypes indicative of introgression from brown trout into marble trout. This was confirmed using microsatellite markers, which showed a higher introgression at nuclear level. Microsatellite loci revealed a strong genetic differentiation across the geographical range of marble trout, which suggests restricted gene flow both at the micro-geographic (within rivers) and macro-geographic (among river systems) scale. A pattern of Isolation-by-Distance was found, in which genetic samples were correlated with hydrographic distances. A general West-to-East partition of the microsatellite polymorphism was observed, which was supported by the geographic distribution of mitochondrial haplotypes.ConclusionWhile introgression at both mitochondrial and nuclear level is unlikely to result from natural migration and might be the consequence of current restocking practices, the pattern of genetic substructuring found at microsatellites has been likely shaped by historical colonization patterns determined by the geological evolution of the hydrographic networks.


Archive | 2015

Climate Warming and Past and Present Distribution of the Processionary Moths (Thaumetopoea spp.) in Europe, Asia Minor and North Africa

Alain Roques; Jérôme Rousselet; Mustafa Avcı; Dimitrios N. Avtzis; Andrea Cristina Basso; Andrea Battisti; Mohamed Lahbib Ben Jamaa; Atia Bensidi; Laura Berardi; Wahiba Berretima; Manuela Branco; Gahdab Chakali; Ejup Çota; Mirza Dautbašić; Horst Delb; Moulay Ahmed El Alaoui El Fels; Saïd El Mercht; Mhamed El Mokhefi; Beat Forster; Jacques Garcia; Georgi Georgiev; Milka Glavendekić; Francis Goussard; Paula Halbig; Lars Henke; Rodolfo Hernańdez; José A. Hódar; Kahraman İpekdal; Maja Jurc; Dietrich Klimetzek

Pine processionary moth, Thaumetopea pityocampa, is a model insect indicator of global warming, the northwards and upwards range expansion of this Mediterranean species being directly associated with the recent warming up. The knowledge about the drivers of moth expansion is synthesized. A first standardized mapping of the northern expansion edge, from Western Europe to Turkey, is presented, then detailed for 20 countries of Europe, Asia Minor and North Africa, including future trends. Additional data about the responses of the other Thaumetopoea species are given. Finally, the chapter points out the importance of the man-mediated introductions in the expansion process.


Archive | 2015

Genetic Diversity and Structure at Different Spatial Scales in the Processionary Moths

Carole Kerdelhué; Andrea Battisti; Christian Burban; Manuela Branco; Anna Cassel-Lundhagen; Kahraman İpekdal; Stig Larsson; Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde; Emmanuelle Magnoux; Eduardo P. Mateus; Zvi Mendel; Enrico Negrisolo; Maria-Rosa Paiva; Isabelle D. Pivotto; Susana Rocha; Cecilia Ronnås; Alain Roques; Jean-Pierre Rossi; Jérôme Rousselet; Paola Salvato; Helena Santos; Mauro Simonato; Lorenzo Zane

This chapter presents the evolutionary history of Thaumetopoea species associated with pines, at different temporal and spatial scales. It corresponds to recent discoveries and ongoing works using sequencing technologies and population genetics. Most of the subchapters focus on the winter pine processionary moths T. pityocampa/T. wilkinsoni including a population with a shifted life cycle. Results concerning the summer pine processionary moth T. pinivora and the evolution of the whole genus are also presented. This chapter gives insights about the effects of Quaternary climate changes in different regions, and allow to study the contemporary changes due to the present climate warming.


Zootaxa | 2012

First record of Cyrtogenius Strohmeyer in Europe, with a key to the European genera of the tribe Dryocoetini (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae).

Massimo Faccoli; Mauro Simonato; Edoardo Petrucco Toffolo

The genus Cyrtogenius Strohmeyer, represented by the species C. luteus (Blandford, 1894), is reported for the first time in Europe. Many adults were collected for four consecutive years (2009–2012) in various localities of northern Italy in both multifunnel and cross-vane traps baited with multilure blends. A diagnosis of the species and a revised key to the European genera of tribe Dryocoetini Lindemann is also reported. An explanation is suggested for the increasing number of recent introductions of exotic scolytids into Europe.

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Jérôme Rousselet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Alain Roques

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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