Slatyer Rachel A, Schoville Sean D, Nufio César R, Buckley Lauren B
Department of Entomology University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison WI USA.
University of Colorado Natural History Museum University of Colorado Boulder CO USA.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Dec 30;10(2):980-997. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5961. eCollection 2020 Jan.
Species responses to environmental change are likely to depend on existing genetic and phenotypic variation, as well as evolutionary potential. A key challenge is to determine whether gene flow might facilitate or impede genomic divergence among populations responding to environmental change, and if emergent phenotypic variation is dependent on gene flow rates. A general expectation is that patterns of genetic differentiation in a set of codistributed species reflect differences in dispersal ability. In less dispersive species, we predict greater genetic divergence and reduced gene flow. This could lead to covariation in life-history traits due to local adaptation, although plasticity or drift could mirror these patterns. We compare genome-wide patterns of genetic structure in four phenotypically variable grasshopper species along a steep elevation gradient near Boulder, Colorado, and test the hypothesis that genomic differentiation is greater in short-winged grasshopper species, and statistically associated with variation in growth, reproductive, and physiological traits along this gradient. In addition, we estimate rates of gene flow under competing demographic models, as well as potential gene flow through surveys of phenological overlap among populations within a species. All species exhibit genetic structure along the elevation gradient and limited gene flow. The most pronounced genetic divergence appears in short-winged (less dispersive) species, which also exhibit less phenological overlap among populations. A high-elevation population of the most widespread species, , appears to be a sink population derived from low elevation populations. While dispersal ability has a clear connection to the genetic structure in different species, genetic distance does not predict growth, reproductive, or physiological trait variation in any species, requiring further investigation to clearly link phenotypic divergence to local adaptation.
物种对环境变化的反应可能取决于现有的遗传和表型变异,以及进化潜力。一个关键挑战是确定基因流是否会促进或阻碍对环境变化做出反应的种群之间的基因组分化,以及新出现的表型变异是否依赖于基因流速率。一个普遍的预期是,一组同域分布物种的遗传分化模式反映了扩散能力的差异。在扩散能力较弱的物种中,我们预测会有更大的遗传分化和减少的基因流。由于局部适应,这可能导致生活史特征的协变,尽管可塑性或漂变可能反映这些模式。我们比较了科罗拉多州博尔德附近沿着陡峭海拔梯度分布的四种表型可变蝗虫物种的全基因组遗传结构模式,并检验了以下假设:短翅蝗虫物种的基因组分化更大,并且在该梯度上与生长、繁殖和生理特征的变异存在统计学关联。此外,我们在竞争的人口统计学模型下估计基因流速率,以及通过对物种内种群间物候重叠的调查来估计潜在基因流。所有物种在海拔梯度上均表现出遗传结构和有限的基因流。最明显的遗传分化出现在短翅(扩散能力较弱)物种中,这些物种在种群间的物候重叠也较少。分布最广的物种的一个高海拔种群似乎是一个源自低海拔种群的汇种群。虽然扩散能力与不同物种的遗传结构有明确联系,但遗传距离并不能预测任何物种的生长、繁殖或生理特征变异,需要进一步研究以明确将表型分化与局部适应联系起来。