Sork Victoria L, Gugger Paul F, Chen Jin-Ming, Werth Silke
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-7239; Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1496;
Appalachian Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Frostburg, MD 21532;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jul 19;113(29):8064-71. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1602675113.
Phylogeography documents the spatial distribution of genetic lineages that result from demographic processes, such as population expansion, population contraction, and gene movement, shaped by climate fluctuations and the physical landscape. Because most phylogeographic studies have used neutral markers, the role of selection may have been undervalued. In this paper, we contend that plants provide a useful evolutionary lesson about the impact of selection on spatial patterns of neutral genetic variation, when the environment affects which individuals can colonize new sites, and on adaptive genetic variation, when environmental heterogeneity creates divergence at specific loci underlying local adaptation. Specifically, we discuss five characteristics found in plants that intensify the impact of selection: sessile growth form, high reproductive output, leptokurtic dispersal, isolation by environment, and the potential to evolve longevity. Collectively, these traits exacerbate the impact of environment on movement between populations and local selection pressures-both of which influence phylogeographic structure. We illustrate how these unique traits shape these processes with case studies of the California endemic oak, Quercus lobata, and the western North American lichen, Ramalina menziesii Obviously, the lessons we learn from plant traits are not unique to plants, but they highlight the need for future animal, plant, and microbe studies to incorporate its impact. Modern tools that generate genome-wide sequence data are now allowing us to decipher how evolutionary processes affect the spatial distribution of different kinds of genes and also to better model future spatial distribution of species in response to climate change.
系统发育地理学记录了由诸如种群扩张、种群收缩和基因流动等人口统计学过程所导致的遗传谱系的空间分布,这些过程受到气候波动和自然景观的影响。由于大多数系统发育地理学研究使用的是中性标记,选择的作用可能被低估了。在本文中,我们认为,当环境影响哪些个体能够在新地点定殖时,植物为研究选择对中性遗传变异空间模式的影响提供了一个有益的进化范例;当环境异质性在局部适应的特定基因座上产生分化时,植物也为研究选择对适应性遗传变异的影响提供了一个有益的进化范例。具体而言,我们讨论了植物中发现的五个强化选择影响的特征:固着生长形式、高繁殖输出、尖峰状扩散、环境隔离以及进化出长寿的潜力。总体而言,这些特征加剧了环境对种群间迁移和局部选择压力的影响,而这两者都会影响系统发育地理结构。我们通过对加利福尼亚特有橡树——裂片栎以及北美西部地衣——梅氏树花地衣的案例研究,来说明这些独特特征是如何塑造这些过程的。显然,我们从植物特征中学到的经验并非植物所独有,但它们凸显了未来动物、植物和微生物研究纳入其影响的必要性。如今,能够生成全基因组序列数据的现代工具使我们能够解读进化过程如何影响不同类型基因的空间分布,并且能够更好地模拟物种在气候变化下未来的空间分布。