Parreira Bárbara Ribeiro, Gopalakrishnan Shyam, Chikhi Lounès
Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark.
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência Oeiras Portugal.
Evol Appl. 2025 Jan 14;18(1):e70063. doi: 10.1111/eva.70063. eCollection 2025 Jan.
Most methods currently used to infer the "demographic history of species" interpret this expression as a history of population size changes. The detection, quantification, and dating of demographic changes often rely on the assumption that population structure can be neglected. However, most vertebrates are typically organized in populations subdivided into social groups that are usually ignored in the interpretation of genetic data. This could be problematic since an increasing number of studies have shown that population structure can generate spurious signatures of population size change. Here, we simulate microsatellite data from a species subdivided into social groups where reproduction occurs according to different mating systems (monogamy, polygynandry, and polygyny). We estimate the effective population size ( ) and quantify the effect of social structure on estimates of changes in . We analyze the simulated data with two widely used methods for demographic inference. The first approach, BOTTLENECK, tests whether the samples are at mutation-drift equilibrium and thus whether a single can be estimated. The second approach, msvar, aims at quantifying and dating changes in . We find that social structure may lead to signals of departure from mutation-drift equilibrium including signals of expansion and bottlenecks. We also find that expansion signals may be observed under simple stationary Wright-Fisher models with low diversity. Since small populations tend to characterize many endangered species, we stress that methods trying to infer should be interpreted with care and validated with simulated data incorporating information about structure. Spurious expansion signals due to social structure can mask critical population size changes. These can obscure true bottleneck events and be particularly problematic in endangered species.
目前用于推断“物种人口统计学历史”的大多数方法将这一表述解释为种群大小变化的历史。人口统计学变化的检测、量化和年代测定通常依赖于可以忽略种群结构的假设。然而,大多数脊椎动物通常以细分为社会群体的种群形式组织起来,而在遗传数据的解释中这些群体通常被忽略。这可能会有问题,因为越来越多的研究表明种群结构会产生种群大小变化的虚假信号。在这里,我们模拟了一个细分为社会群体的物种的微卫星数据,该物种根据不同的交配系统(一夫一妻制、多夫多妻制和一夫多妻制)进行繁殖。我们估计有效种群大小( )并量化社会结构对 变化估计的影响。我们用两种广泛使用的人口统计学推断方法分析模拟数据。第一种方法,BOTTLENECK,测试样本是否处于突变 - 漂变平衡,从而测试是否可以估计单个 。第二种方法,msvar,旨在量化和确定 的变化年代。我们发现社会结构可能导致偏离突变 - 漂变平衡的信号,包括扩张和瓶颈信号。我们还发现在具有低多样性的简单平稳赖特 - 费希尔模型下可能会观察到扩张信号。由于小种群往往是许多濒危物种的特征,我们强调试图推断 的方法应该谨慎解释,并用包含结构信息的模拟数据进行验证。由于社会结构导致的虚假扩张信号可能会掩盖关键的种群大小变化。这些可能会掩盖真正的瓶颈事件,并且在濒危物种中尤其成问题。