Cicero Carla
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3160, USA.
Evolution. 2004 Jul;58(7):1573-87. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01737.x.
Range limits and secondary contact zones often occur at ecotones between major associations of habitat and climate. Therefore, understanding processes that limit sympatry between species in such areas provides an important framework for testing biogeographic and evolutionary hypotheses. Theoretical and empirical work has shown that the evolution of species borders is influenced by a complexity of factors, including gene flow from central to peripheral populations and the ability of species to adapt locally to environmental conditions. However, few studies have used bioclimatic models, combined with molecular and morphological data, to predict geographic range limits in the context of gene flow across a secondary contact zone. In this study, I applied these methods to test specific hypotheses about barriers to sympatry between closely related species where they approach and contact each other. Specifically, I examined the importance of historical isolation, local adaptation, and symmetry of gene flow in limiting sympatry and range expansion of ecologically distinct species across environmental gradients. Molecular (mitochondrial DNA, allozymes), morphological, and bioclimatic data were obtained for two avian sibling species (Baeolophus inornatus and B. ridgwayi) that exist in recent, narrow secondary contact in northern California. These species are broadly allopatric and occupy rangewide associations of oak and pinyon-juniper woodlands, respectively, although B. inornatus also inhabits mixed or juniper woodlands locally. Patterns of molecular variation generally were congruent with morphological and bioclimatic data, and support prior evidence for a history of isolation, adaptation, and divergence in distinctive, species-specific vegetation-climate associations. However, molecular and morphological clines fall east of the limit of oaks, and individuals of B. inornatus in this juniper-associated contact zone experience bioclimates that are more similar to B. ridgwayi than to B. inornatus in oak habitat. Thus, B. inornatus is able to adapt and expand locally into the range of its close relative, but not vice versa. These data support the hypothesis that gene flow is asymmetrical where peripheral populations meet at range boundaries. Physiological differences between species may play an important role in influencing these patterns. Empirical studies that highlight the importance of local adaptation and patterns of gene flow in which closely related species contact across ecotones are central to understanding limits on geographic ranges, sympatry, and introgression-a cornerstone of biogeographic and speciation theory.
分布范围界限和次生接触带通常出现在主要栖息地和气候组合之间的生态交错带。因此,了解限制这些区域物种同域分布的过程,为检验生物地理学和进化假说提供了一个重要框架。理论和实证研究表明,物种边界的进化受到多种因素的影响,包括从中心种群到边缘种群的基因流动以及物种在当地适应环境条件的能力。然而,很少有研究将生物气候模型与分子和形态学数据相结合,在基因流穿过次生接触带的背景下预测地理分布范围界限。在本研究中,我应用这些方法来检验关于近缘物种在相互靠近和接触时同域分布障碍的特定假说。具体来说,我研究了历史隔离、局部适应和基因流对称性在限制生态不同物种在环境梯度上的同域分布和范围扩展中的重要性。获取了加利福尼亚北部近期狭窄次生接触中存在的两种亲缘关系相近的鸟类(纯色丛鸦和里氏丛鸦)的分子(线粒体DNA、等位酶)、形态学和生物气候数据。这些物种在很大程度上是异域分布的,分别占据了全范围的橡树和矮松 - 桧树林地组合,尽管纯色丛鸦在当地也栖息于混交林或桧树林地。分子变异模式总体上与形态学和生物气候数据一致,并支持了先前关于在独特的、物种特异性植被 - 气候组合中存在隔离、适应和分化历史的证据。然而,分子和形态学渐变群位于橡树分布界限以东,并且在这个与桧树相关的接触带中的纯色丛鸦个体所经历的生物气候与里氏丛鸦比与橡树栖息地中的纯色丛鸦更为相似。因此,纯色丛鸦能够在当地适应并扩展到其近缘物种的分布范围内,但反之则不然。这些数据支持了这样的假说,即在外围种群在分布范围边界相遇的地方,基因流是不对称的。物种之间的生理差异可能在影响这些模式中起重要作用。强调局部适应和近缘物种在生态交错带接触时基因流模式重要性的实证研究,对于理解地理分布范围、同域分布和基因渗入的限制至关重要——这是生物地理学和物种形成理论的基石。