Center for Life Sciences Education, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Integrative Life Sciences Doctoral Program, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Aug 1;285(1884):20181224. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1224.
As urbanization drastically alters the natural landscape and generates novel habitats within cities, the potential for changes to gene flow for urban-dwelling species increases. The western black widow spider () is a medically relevant urban adapter pest species, for which we have previously identified population genetic signatures consistent with urbanization facilitating gene flow, likely due to human-mediated transport. Here, in an analysis of 1.9 million genome-wide SNPs, we contrast broad-scale geographical analyses of 10 urban and 11 non-urban locales with fine-scale within-city analyses including 30 urban locales across the western USA. These hierarchical datasets enable us to test hypotheses of how urbanization impacts multiple urban cities and their genetic connectivity at different spatial scales. Coupled fine-scale and broad-scale analyses reveal contrasting patterns of high and low genetic differentiation among locales within cities as a result of low and high genetic connectivity, respectively, of these cities to the overall population network. We discuss these results as they challenge the use of cities as replicates of urban eco-evolution, and have implications for conservation and human health in a rapidly growing urban habitat.
随着城市化剧烈改变自然景观并在城市内部产生新的生境,城市居住物种基因流动发生变化的可能性增加。黑寡妇蜘蛛()是一种具有医学重要性的城市适应害虫物种,我们之前已经确定了种群遗传特征,表明城市化促进了基因流动,这可能是由于人类介导的运输。在这里,在对 190 万个全基因组 SNP 的分析中,我们对比了对 10 个城市和 11 个非城市地点的广泛地理分析,以及包括美国西部 30 个城市在内的精细城市内分析。这些分层数据集使我们能够检验城市化如何影响多个城市及其在不同空间尺度上的遗传连通性的假设。综合精细和广泛的分析揭示了城市内部不同地点之间遗传分化的高低模式,这是由于这些城市与整个种群网络的遗传连通性高低不同所致。我们讨论了这些结果,因为它们挑战了将城市用作城市生态进化的复制品的用途,并对快速增长的城市栖息地中的保护和人类健康产生了影响。