Taylor Douglas R, Keller Stephen R
Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4328, USA.
Evolution. 2007 Feb;61(2):334-45. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00037.x.
For a species rapidly expanding its geographic range, such as during biological invasion, most alleles in the introduced range will have their evolutionary origins in the native range. Yet, the way in which historical processes occurring over evolutionary time in the native range contribute to the diversity sampled during contemporary invasion is largely unknown. We used chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) gene genealogies and coalescent methods to study two congeneric plants, Silene latifolia and S. vulgaris. We examined how phylogenetic diversity was shaped by demographic growth and historical range expansions in the native European range, and how this history affected the diversity sampled during their recent invasion of North America. Genealogies from both species depart from neutrality, likely as a result of demographic expansion in the ancestral range, the timing of which corresponds to shortly after each species originated. However, the species differ in the spatial distribution of cpDNA lineages across the native range. Silene latifolia shows a highly significant phylogeographic structure that most likely reflects different avenues of the post-glacial expansion into northern Europe from Mediterranean refugia. By contrast, cpDNA lineages in S. vulgaris have been widely scattered across Europe during, or since, the most recent post-glacial expansion. These different evolutionary histories resulted in dramatic differences in how phylogenetic diversity was sampled during invasion of North America. In S. latifolia, relatively few, discrete invasion events from a structured native range resulted in a rather severe genetic bottleneck, but also opportunities for admixture among previously isolated lineages. In S. vulgaris, lack of genetic structure was accompanied by more representative sampling of phylogenetic diversity during invasion, and reduced potential for admixture. Our results provide clear insights into how historical processes may feed forward to influence the phylogenetic diversity of species invading new geographic ranges.
对于一个正在迅速扩大其地理范围的物种,比如在生物入侵过程中,引入范围内的大多数等位基因其进化起源都在原生范围内。然而,在原生范围内进化时间里发生的历史过程如何促成当代入侵期间所采样的多样性,这在很大程度上还不清楚。我们使用叶绿体DNA(cpDNA)基因谱系和溯祖方法来研究两种同属植物,即宽叶蝇子草和普通蝇子草。我们研究了在欧洲原生范围内系统发育多样性是如何由种群增长和历史范围扩张所塑造的,以及这段历史如何影响它们近期入侵北美期间所采样的多样性。两个物种的谱系都偏离了中性,这可能是由于祖先范围内的种群扩张,其时间与每个物种起源后不久相对应。然而,这两个物种在原生范围内cpDNA谱系的空间分布上有所不同。宽叶蝇子草显示出高度显著的系统地理结构,这很可能反映了从地中海避难所向北欧的冰期后扩张的不同路径。相比之下,普通蝇子草的cpDNA谱系在最近一次冰期后扩张期间或之后已广泛散布于欧洲各地。这些不同的进化历史导致了在入侵北美期间系统发育多样性采样方式上的巨大差异。在宽叶蝇子草中,来自结构化原生范围的相对较少且离散的入侵事件导致了相当严重的遗传瓶颈,但也为先前隔离的谱系之间的混合创造了机会。在普通蝇子草中,缺乏遗传结构伴随着入侵期间系统发育多样性更具代表性的采样,以及混合的可能性降低。我们的结果为历史过程如何向前影响入侵新地理范围物种的系统发育多样性提供了清晰的见解。