Funk W C, Murphy M A, Hoke K L, Muths E, Amburgey S M, Lemmon E M, Lemmon A R
Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2016 Feb;29(2):241-52. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12760. Epub 2015 Oct 1.
Evolutionary theory predicts that divergent selection pressures across elevational gradients could cause adaptive divergence and reproductive isolation in the process of ecological speciation. Although there is substantial evidence for adaptive divergence across elevation, there is less evidence that this restricts gene flow. Previous work in the boreal chorus frog (Pseudacris maculata) has demonstrated adaptive divergence in morphological, life history and physiological traits across an elevational gradient from approximately 1500-3000 m in the Colorado Front Range, USA. We tested whether this adaptive divergence is associated with restricted gene flow across elevation - as would be expected if incipient speciation were occurring - and, if so, whether behavioural isolation contributes to reproductive isolation. Our analysis of 12 microsatellite loci in 797 frogs from 53 populations revealed restricted gene flow across elevation, even after controlling for geographic distance and topography. Calls also varied significantly across elevation in dominant frequency, pulse number and pulse duration, which was partly, but not entirely, due to variation in body size and temperature across elevation. However, call variation did not result in strong behavioural isolation: in phonotaxis experiments, low-elevation females tended to prefer an average low-elevation call over a high-elevation call, and vice versa for high-elevation females, but this trend was not statistically significant. In summary, our results show that adaptive divergence across elevation restricts gene flow in P. maculata, but the mechanisms for this potential incipient speciation remain open.
进化理论预测,海拔梯度上不同的选择压力可能会在生态物种形成过程中导致适应性分化和生殖隔离。尽管有大量证据表明存在跨海拔的适应性分化,但较少有证据表明这会限制基因流动。此前对北美林蛙(Pseudacris maculata)的研究表明,在美国科罗拉多前山山脉海拔约1500 - 3000米的梯度范围内,其形态、生活史和生理特征存在适应性分化。我们测试了这种适应性分化是否与跨海拔的基因流动受限相关(如果正在发生初始物种形成,情况应该如此),如果是这样,行为隔离是否有助于生殖隔离。我们对来自53个种群的797只青蛙的12个微卫星位点进行分析,结果显示即使在控制了地理距离和地形因素之后,跨海拔的基因流动依然受限。叫声在海拔梯度上的主频、脉冲数和脉冲持续时间也有显著差异,部分(但并非全部)原因是海拔高度上的体型和温度变化。然而,叫声差异并未导致强烈的行为隔离:在趋声实验中,低海拔雌性青蛙倾向于选择平均低海拔叫声而非高海拔叫声,高海拔雌性青蛙则相反,但这种趋势在统计学上并不显著。总之,我们的结果表明,跨海拔的适应性分化限制了北美林蛙的基因流动,但这种潜在初始物种形成的机制仍不明确。