Plant Systematics and Biodiversity Laboratory, Department of Botany and Plant biology of the University of Geneva, 1 Chemin de l'Impératrice, CH-1292, Chambésy, Geneva, Switzerland.
Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH-8008, Zurich, Switzerland.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2020 Aug;95(4):1055-1072. doi: 10.1111/brv.12598. Epub 2020 Mar 31.
With the realization that much of the biological diversity on Earth has been generated by discrete evolutionary radiations, there has been a rapid increase in research into the biotic (key innovations) and abiotic (key environments) circumstances in which such radiations took place. Here we focus on the potential importance of population genetic structure and trait genetic architecture in explaining radiations. We propose a verbal model describing the stages of an evolutionary radiation: first invading a suitable adaptive zone and expanding both spatially and ecologically through this zone; secondly, diverging genetically into numerous distinct populations; and, finally, speciating. There are numerous examples of the first stage; the difficulty, however, is explaining how genetic diversification can take place from the establishment of a, presumably, genetically depauperate population in a new adaptive zone. We explore the potential roles of epigenetics and transposable elements (TEs), of neutral process such as genetic drift in combination with trait genetic architecture, of gene flow limitation through isolation by distance (IBD), isolation by ecology and isolation by colonization, the possible role of intra-specific competition, and that of admixture and hybridization in increasing the genetic diversity of the founding populations. We show that many of the predictions of this model are corroborated. Most radiations occur in complex adaptive zones, which facilitate the establishment of many small populations exposed to genetic drift and divergent selection. We also show that many radiations (especially those resulting from long-distance dispersal) were established by polyploid lineages, and that many radiating lineages have small genome sizes. However, there are several other predictions which are not (yet) possible to test: that epigenetics has played a role in radiations, that radiations occur more frequently in clades with small gene flow distances, or that the ancestors of radiations had large fundamental niches. At least some of these may be testable in the future as more genome and epigenome data become available. The implication of this model is that many radiations may be hard polytomies because the genetic divergence leading to speciation happens within a very short time, and that the divergence history may be further obscured by hybridization. Furthermore, it suggests that only lineages with the appropriate genetic architecture will be able to radiate, and that such a radiation will happen in a meta-population environment. Understanding the genetic architecture of a lineage may be an essential part of accounting for why some lineages radiate, and some do not.
随着人们意识到地球上的许多生物多样性是由离散的进化辐射产生的,对这些辐射发生的生物(关键创新)和非生物(关键环境)环境的研究迅速增加。在这里,我们专注于种群遗传结构和性状遗传结构在解释辐射中的潜在重要性。我们提出了一个描述进化辐射阶段的口头模型:首先,入侵一个合适的适应区,并通过该区域在空间和生态上扩张;其次,在遗传上分化成许多不同的种群;最后,物种形成。有许多第一阶段的例子;然而,困难在于解释如何在一个新的适应区中建立一个遗传上可能贫瘠的种群的情况下,如何发生遗传多样化。我们探讨了表观遗传学和转座元件(TEs)、中性过程(如遗传漂变与性状遗传结构的结合)、通过距离隔离(IBD)、生态隔离和殖民隔离限制基因流动、种内竞争的可能作用以及同域竞争和杂交在增加基础种群遗传多样性方面的可能作用。我们表明,该模型的许多预测得到了证实。大多数辐射发生在复杂的适应区,这些适应区有利于许多暴露于遗传漂变和分歧选择的小种群的建立。我们还表明,许多辐射(尤其是那些由长距离扩散引起的辐射)是由多倍体谱系建立的,许多辐射谱系的基因组较小。然而,还有一些其他预测目前还无法验证:表观遗传学在辐射中发挥了作用,辐射发生在基因流动距离较小的进化枝中更为频繁,或者辐射祖先具有较大的基本生态位。随着更多的基因组和表观基因组数据的出现,至少其中一些可能在未来进行测试。该模型的含义是,许多辐射可能是硬多系发生的,因为导致物种形成的遗传分歧发生在很短的时间内,并且分歧历史可能会因杂交而进一步模糊。此外,它表明只有具有适当遗传结构的谱系才能辐射,并且这种辐射将发生在元种群环境中。了解谱系的遗传结构可能是解释为什么某些谱系辐射而某些谱系不辐射的关键部分。