Beheregaray Luciano B, Gibbs James P, Havill Nathan, Fritts Thomas H, Powell Jeffrey R, Caccone Adalgisa
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale Institute of Biospheric Studies, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520-8106, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Apr 27;101(17):6514-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0400393101. Epub 2004 Apr 14.
Isolated oceanic archipelagos have played a major role in the development of evolutionary theory by offering a unique setting for studying spatial and temporal patterns of biological diversification. However, the evolutionary events that cause associations between genetic variation and geography in archipelago radiations are largely unknown. This finding is especially true in the Galápagos Islands, where molecular studies have revealed conflicting biogeographic patterns. Here, we elucidate the history of diversification of giant Galápagos tortoises by using mtDNA sequences from 802 individuals representing all known extant populations. We test biogeographic predictions based on geological history and assess the roles of volcano emergence and island formation in driving evolutionary diversification. Patterns of colonization and lineage sorting appear highly consistent with the chronological formation of the archipelago. Populations from older islands are composed exclusively of endemic haplotypes that define divergent monophyletic clades. Younger populations, although currently differentiated, exhibit patterns of colonization, demographic variation and genetic interchange shaped by recent volcanism. Colonization probably occurs shortly after a volcano emerges through range expansion from older volcanoes. Volcanism can also create temporal shifts from historical to recurrent events, such as promoting gene flow by creating land bridges between isolated volcanoes. The association of spatial and temporal patterns of genetic variation with geophysical aspects of the environment can best be attributed to the limited dispersal and migration of tortoises following an oceanographic current. The endangered giant Galápagos tortoises represent a rapid allopatric radiation and further exemplify evolutionary processes in one of the world's greatest natural laboratories of evolution.
孤立的海洋群岛通过提供一个研究生物多样性时空模式的独特环境,在进化理论的发展中发挥了重要作用。然而,在群岛辐射中导致遗传变异与地理之间产生关联的进化事件在很大程度上仍不为人知。这一发现对于加拉帕戈斯群岛尤为适用,在那里分子研究揭示了相互矛盾的生物地理模式。在此,我们通过使用来自代表所有已知现存种群的802个个体的线粒体DNA序列,阐明了加拉帕戈斯巨型陆龟的多样化历史。我们基于地质历史检验生物地理预测,并评估火山出现和岛屿形成在推动进化多样化中的作用。殖民化和谱系分选模式似乎与群岛的形成时间高度一致。来自较古老岛屿的种群完全由定义不同单系分支的特有单倍型组成。较年轻的种群虽然目前存在差异,但呈现出由近期火山活动塑造的殖民化、种群动态变化和基因交换模式。殖民化可能在火山通过从较古老火山的范围扩张出现后不久发生。火山活动还可以造成从历史事件到反复发生事件的时间转变,例如通过在孤立的火山之间形成陆桥来促进基因流动。遗传变异的时空模式与环境地球物理方面的关联,最有可能归因于陆龟沿着洋流的有限扩散和迁移。濒危的加拉帕戈斯巨型陆龟代表了一次快速的异域辐射,并进一步例证了世界上最伟大的自然进化实验室之一中的进化过程。