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Isolation and introductions disrupt the homogeneity of Argentine ants in Europe.

Preprint Created on 11 Jun 2026 bioRxiv

The introduction of alien species into new habitats stands as a pressing economic and ecological challenge but it is also essential for unveiling evolutionary processes. The introduction of the Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) led to the spread of a single supercolony through different continents and thousands of kilometres like in Europe, from Northwest Spain to Greece. It was assumed that the high invasiveness of the species mainly relied on the lack of agonism among colonies, an effect derived from its introduction. However, recent studies suggest that local adaptations and evolutionary divergence could involve the disruption of the Argentine ant empire into a mosaic of competitive colonies. We investigated how isolation affects population divergence by comparing mainland and island populations in two distant regions colonized in Spain and in Greece with morphology, agonism, cuticular hydrocarbons, and genetic diversity of ant workers. Our results showed that all colonies sampled belonged to the most spread supercolony in Europe (main supercolony) except one sampled in Crete (Heraklion; Greece), which resulted to be a supercolony not registered in Europe. The Heraklian supercolony showed a different chemical and genetic profile and hostile agonism towards the other Greek colonies. Differences between islands and mainland colonies belonging to the main supercolony were higher in Galiza than in Greece. Surprisingly, the chemical profile of the Cretan colony belonging to the main supercolony showed more similarity with the Galizan colonies than with the Greek mainland, suggesting that L. humile may have been introduced into Greece through this island instead of the mainland. Our study suggests that local adaptations in Argentine ant colonies can trigger competition between colonies. Our data strongly support the existence of a candidate supercolony which highlights either ongoing introductions of L. humile in Europe or gaps in our understanding of its metapopulation dynamics.

Narasimhan, S., Csata, E., Trapero-Camesella, L., Cordonnier, M., Mannino, G., Casacci, L. P., Witek, M., Sanmartin-Villar, I.

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