Marko P B
Department of Marine Science, 12-7 Venable Hall, CB 3300, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-3300, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2004 Mar;13(3):597-611. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-294x.2004.02096.x.
In marine environments, many species have apparently colonized high latitude regions following the last glacial maximum (LGM) yet lack a life-history stage, such as a free-living larva, that is clearly capable of long-distance dispersal. Two hypotheses can explain the modern high latitude distributions of these marine taxa: (1) survival in northern refugia during the LGM or (2) rapid post-glacial dispersal by nonlarval stages. To distinguish these two scenarios, I characterized the genetic structure of two closely related northeastern Pacific gastropods that lack planktonic larvae but which have distributions extending more than 1000 km north of the southern limit of glaciers at the LGM. Despite having identical larval dispersal potential, these closely related species exhibit fundamentally different patterns of genetic structure. In Nucella ostrina, haplotype diversity among northern populations (British Columbia and Alaska) is low, no pattern of isolation by distance exists and a coalescent-based model of population growth indicates that during the LGM population size was reduced to less than 35% of its current size. In the congeneric and often sympatric N. lamellosa, northern populations harbour a diversity of ancient private haplotypes, significant evidence of isolation by distance exists and regional subdivision was found between northern (Alaska) and southern (southern British Columbia, Washington and Oregon) populations. Estimates of coalescent parameters indicate only a modest reduction in population size during the LGM and that northern and southern populations of N. lamellosa split approximately 50 Kyr before the LGM. The patterns are consistent with the hypothesis that N. ostrina recently reinvaded the northeastern Pacific but N. lamellosa survived the LGM in a northern refuge. A comparison of similar studies in this region indicates that depleted levels of genetic variation at high latitudes--evidence suggestive of recent colonization from a southern refuge--is more common among intertidal species that live relatively high on the shore, where exposure times to cold stress in air are longer than for species living lower on the shore. These data suggest that for some faunas, ecological differences between taxa may be more important than larval dispersal potential in determining species' long-term biogeographical responses to climate change.
在海洋环境中,许多物种显然是在末次盛冰期(LGM)之后殖民到高纬度地区的,但它们缺乏一个明显能够进行长距离扩散的生活史阶段,比如自由生活的幼虫阶段。有两种假说可以解释这些海洋类群在现代的高纬度分布情况:(1)在末次盛冰期期间在北方避难所中存活下来;(2)通过非幼虫阶段进行快速的冰后期扩散。为了区分这两种情况,我对两种密切相关的东北太平洋腹足类动物的遗传结构进行了表征,它们没有浮游幼虫,但分布范围在末次盛冰期冰川南界以北超过1000公里。尽管具有相同的幼虫扩散潜力,但这些密切相关的物种表现出根本不同的遗传结构模式。在奥氏核螺(Nucella ostrina)中,北方种群(不列颠哥伦比亚省和阿拉斯加)之间的单倍型多样性较低,不存在距离隔离模式,基于溯祖模型的种群增长表明,在末次盛冰期期间种群数量减少到当前规模的不到35%。在同属且常同域分布的薄片核螺(N. lamellosa)中,北方种群拥有多种古老的特有单倍型,存在明显的距离隔离证据,并且在北方(阿拉斯加)和南方(不列颠哥伦比亚省南部、华盛顿州和俄勒冈州)种群之间发现了区域细分。溯祖参数估计表明,在末次盛冰期期间种群数量仅适度减少,并且薄片核螺的北方和南方种群在末次盛冰期之前约50 Kyr就已分化。这些模式与以下假说一致,即奥氏核螺最近重新侵入东北太平洋,但薄片核螺在北方避难所中度过了末次盛冰期。对该地区类似研究的比较表明,高纬度地区遗传变异水平的降低——这表明是最近从南方避难所殖民而来的证据——在潮间带物种中更为常见,这些物种生活在相对较高的海岸位置,在空气中暴露于寒冷压力的时间比生活在较低海岸位置的物种更长。这些数据表明,对于一些动物群来说,在决定物种对气候变化的长期生物地理响应方面,类群之间的生态差异可能比幼虫扩散潜力更为重要。