García-Navas V, Ferrer E S, Sanz J J, Ortego J
Grupo de Investigación de la Biodiversidad Genética y Cultural, Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (CSIC-UCLM-JCCM), Ciudad Real, Spain; Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales, Facultad de Ciencias Ambientales y Bioquímica, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Toledo, Spain.
J Evol Biol. 2014 Aug;27(8):1590-603. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12412. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
Dispersal and local patterns of adaptation play a major role on the ecological and evolutionary trajectory of natural populations. In this study, we employ a combination of genetic (25 microsatellite markers) and field-based information (seven study years) to analyse the impact of immigration and local patterns of adaptation in two nearby (<7 km) blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) populations. We used genetic assignment analyses to identify immigrant individuals and found that dispersal rate is female-biased (72%). Data on lifetime reproductive success indicated that immigrant females produced fewer local recruits than their philopatric counterparts whereas immigrant males recruited more offspring than those that remained in their natal location. In spite of the considerably higher immigration rates of females, our results indicate that, in absolute terms, their demographic and genetic impact in the receiving populations is lower than that in immigrant males. Immigrants often brought novel alleles into the studied populations and a high proportion of them were transmitted to their recruits, indicating that the genetic impact of immigrants is not ephemeral. Although only a few kilometres apart, the two study populations were genetically differentiated and showed strong divergence in different phenotypic and life-history traits. An almost absent inter-population dispersal, together with the fact that both populations receive immigrants from different source populations, is probably the main cause of the observed pattern of genetic differentiation. However, phenotypic differentiation (PST) for all the studied traits greatly exceeded neutral genetic differentiation (FST), indicating that divergent natural selection is the prevailing factor determining the evolutionary trajectory of these populations. Our study highlights the importance of integrating individual- and population-based approaches to obtain a comprehensive view about the role of dispersal and natural selection on structuring the genotypic and phenotypic characteristics of natural populations.
扩散和局部适应模式在自然种群的生态和进化轨迹中起着重要作用。在本研究中,我们结合遗传信息(25个微卫星标记)和实地调查信息(七个研究年份),分析了迁入和局部适应模式对两个相邻(<7公里)的青山雀(Cyanistes caeruleus)种群的影响。我们使用遗传分配分析来识别迁入个体,发现扩散率存在雌性偏向(72%)。终生繁殖成功率的数据表明,迁入的雌性产生的本地后代比留居本地的雌性少,而迁入的雄性产生的后代比留在出生地的雄性多。尽管雌性的迁入率要高得多,但我们的结果表明,从绝对值来看,它们对迁入种群的人口统计学和遗传影响低于迁入的雄性。迁入者常常将新的等位基因带入研究种群,并且其中很大一部分传递给了它们的后代,这表明迁入者的遗传影响并非短暂的。尽管两个研究种群相距仅几公里,但它们在遗传上存在分化,并且在不同的表型和生活史特征上表现出强烈的差异。几乎不存在种群间的扩散,再加上两个种群都接收来自不同源种群的迁入者,这可能是观察到的遗传分化模式的主要原因。然而,所有研究性状的表型分化(PST)大大超过了中性遗传分化(FST),这表明不同的自然选择是决定这些种群进化轨迹的主要因素。我们的研究强调了整合基于个体和种群的方法以全面了解扩散和自然选择在构建自然种群基因型和表型特征中的作用的重要性。