Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, Saving our Species Program, New South Wales Government, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 Jun;91(6):1104-1118. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13488. Epub 2021 Apr 21.
Range expansions can be shaped by sex differences in behaviours and other phenotypic traits affecting dispersal and reproduction. Here, we investigate sex differences in morphology, behaviour and genomic population differentiation along a climate-mediated range expansion in the common bluetail damselfly (Ischnura elegans) in northern Europe. We sampled 65 sites along a 583-km gradient spanning the I. elegans range in Sweden and quantified latitudinal gradients in site relative abundance, sex ratio and sex-specific shifts in body size and mating status (a measure of sexual selection). Using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for 426 individuals from 25 sites, we further investigated sex-specific landscape and climatic effects on neutral genetic connectivity and migration patterns. We found evidence for sex differences associated with the I. elegans range expansion, namely (a) increased male body size with latitude, but no latitudinal effect on female body size, resulting in reduced sexual dimorphism towards the range limit, (b) a steeper decline in male genetic similarity with increasing geographic distance than in females, (c) male-biased genetic migration propensity and (d) a latitudinal cline in migration distance (increasing migratory distances towards the range margin), which was stronger in males. Cooler mean annual temperatures towards the range limit were associated with increased resistance to gene flow in both sexes. Sex ratios became increasingly male biased towards the range limit, and there was evidence for a changed sexual selection regime shifting from favouring larger males in the south to favouring smaller males in the north. Our findings suggest sex-specific spatial phenotype sorting at the range limit, where larger males disperse more under higher landscape resistance associated with cooler climates. The combination of latitudinal gradients in sex-biased dispersal, increasing male body size and (reduced) sexual size dimorphism should have emergent consequences for sexual selection dynamics and the mating system at the expanding range front. Our study illustrates the importance of considering sex differences in the study of range expansions driven by ongoing climate change.
范围扩展可以通过影响扩散和繁殖的行为和其他表型特征的性别差异来塑造。在这里,我们研究了在北欧常见的蓝尾蜻蜓(Ischnura elegans)的气候介导的范围扩展中,形态、行为和基因组种群分化方面的性别差异。我们在瑞典的 I. elegans 范围内沿 583 公里的梯度采样了 65 个地点,并量化了地点相对丰度、性别比例以及与性选择相关的身体大小和交配状态(性选择的衡量标准)的性别特异性变化的纬度梯度。利用来自 25 个地点的 426 个个体的单核苷酸多态性 (SNP) 数据,我们进一步研究了性别特异性景观和气候对中性遗传连通性和迁移模式的影响。我们发现了与 I. elegans 范围扩展相关的性别差异的证据,即 (a) 雄性体型随纬度增加而增加,但雌性体型没有纬度效应,导致性别二态性向范围极限减少,(b) 与女性相比,男性的遗传相似性随地理距离增加而下降得更陡峭,(c) 男性遗传迁移倾向偏斜,以及 (d) 迁移距离的纬度梯度(向范围边缘迁移的距离增加),在男性中更强。范围极限处的平均年气温越低,两性的基因流阻力越大。性别比例向范围极限变得越来越偏向雄性,并且有证据表明,性选择机制发生了变化,从南部偏向更大的雄性转变为北部偏向更小的雄性。我们的研究结果表明,在范围极限处存在性别特异性的空间表型分类,在与较冷气候相关的更高景观阻力下,体型较大的雄性更容易扩散。在偏向雄性的扩散、雄性体型增大(和/或)性二态性降低的纬度梯度的组合下,应该会对扩展范围前沿的性选择动态和交配系统产生新的影响。我们的研究说明了在研究由持续的气候变化驱动的范围扩展时考虑性别的重要性。