Division of Evolution, Ecology and Genetics, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2012 Aug;21(15):3809-22. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05637.x. Epub 2012 May 30.
Identifying explicit hypotheses regarding the factors determining genetic structuring within species can be difficult, especially in species distributed in historically dynamic regions. To contend with these challenges, we use a framework that combines species distribution models, environmental data and multi-locus genetic data to generate and explore phylogeographic hypotheses for reptile species occupying the coastal sand-dune and sand-plain habitats of the south-western Australian biodiversity hotspot, a community which has both a high diversity of endemics and has varied dramatically in spatial extent over time. We use hierarchical amova, summary statistic and distance-based analyses to explicitly test specific phylogeographic hypotheses. Namely, we test if biogeographic vicariance across barriers, habitat stability, population isolation along a linear habitat or fragmentation across different environments can explain genetic divergence within five co-distributed squamate reptile species. Our results show that patterns of genetic variation reflect complex and species-specific interactions related to the spatial distribution of habitats present currently and during repeated glacial minima, as opposed to being associated with historical factors such as habitat stability between glacial and inter-glacial periods or vicariant barriers. We suggest that the large impact of habitat characteristics over time (i.e. relative levels of habitat connectivity, climatic gradients and spatial heterogeneity of soil types) reflects the ecological restrictions of the sand-dune and sand-plain reptile communities and may explain the lack of concordance across taxa. The study demonstrates the general utility of the approach for assemblage-level, as well as single species, phylogeographic study, including its usefulness for exploring biologically informed hypotheses about what factors have influenced patterns of genetic variation.
确定决定物种内遗传结构的因素的明确假设可能具有挑战性,特别是在分布于历史上动态区域的物种中。为了应对这些挑战,我们使用了一种结合物种分布模型、环境数据和多基因遗传数据的框架,为栖息于澳大利亚西南部生物多样性热点地区沿海沙丘和沙原生境的爬行动物物种生成和探索系统地理学假说,该地区既有高度的特有种多样性,又在时间上经历了巨大的空间范围变化。我们使用分层 amova、总结统计和基于距离的分析来明确检验具体的系统地理学假设。具体来说,我们检验生物地理隔离是否跨越障碍、栖息地稳定性、线性栖息地沿线的种群隔离或不同环境之间的片段化是否可以解释五个分布广泛的有鳞目爬行动物物种内的遗传分歧。我们的结果表明,遗传变异模式反映了与当前和重复冰川最小期存在的栖息地空间分布相关的复杂且特定于物种的相互作用,而不是与历史因素(如冰川期和间冰期之间的栖息地稳定性或隔离障碍)相关。我们认为,栖息地特征随时间的巨大影响(即相对水平的栖息地连通性、气候梯度和土壤类型的空间异质性)反映了沙丘和沙原爬行动物群落的生态限制,并可能解释了跨分类群的不一致性。该研究证明了该方法在集合水平以及单一物种系统地理学研究中的一般适用性,包括其在探索对遗传变异模式有影响的因素的生物学启发假说方面的有用性。