Bialozyt R, Ziegenhagen B, Petit R J
Department of Conservation Biology, University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
J Evol Biol. 2006 Jan;19(1):12-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2005.00995.x.
Currently many attempts are made to reconstruct the colonization history of plant species after the last ice age. A surprising finding is that during the colonization phase genetic diversity did not decrease as much as expected. In this paper we examine whether long distance seed dispersal events could play a role in the unexpected maintenance of genetic diversity during range expansion. This study is based on simulations carried out with a maternally inherited haploid locus using a cellular automaton. The simulations reveal a close relationship between the frequency of long distance seed dispersal events and the amount of genetic diversity preserved during colonization. In particular, when the colonized region is narrow, a complete loss of genetic diversity results from the occurrence of very rare long distance dispersal (LDD) events. We call this phenomenon the 'embolism effect'. However, slightly higher rates of LDD events reverse this effect, up to the point that diversity is better preserved than in a pure diffusion model. This phenomenon is linked to the reorganization of the genetic structure during colonization and is called the 'reshuffling effect'.
目前,人们正在进行许多尝试来重建植物物种在上次冰期之后的殖民化历史。一个惊人的发现是,在殖民化阶段,遗传多样性的减少并没有预期的那么多。在本文中,我们研究了长距离种子传播事件是否可能在范围扩张期间遗传多样性的意外维持中发挥作用。这项研究基于使用细胞自动机对母系遗传的单倍体基因座进行的模拟。模拟结果揭示了长距离种子传播事件的频率与殖民化期间保留的遗传多样性数量之间的密切关系。特别是,当被殖民地区狭窄时,非常罕见的长距离传播(LDD)事件的发生会导致遗传多样性的完全丧失。我们将这种现象称为“栓塞效应”。然而,略高的LDD事件发生率会扭转这种效应,直到多样性比纯扩散模型中保存得更好。这种现象与殖民化期间遗传结构的重组有关,被称为“重新洗牌效应”。