Literature DB >> 15562693

How much of the variation in adaptive divergence can be explained by gene flow? An evaluation using lake-stream stickleback pairs.

Andrew P Hendry1, Eric B Taylor.   

Abstract

How much of the variation in adaptive divergence can be explained by gene flow? The answer to this question should objectively reveal whether gene flow generally places a substantial constraint on evolutionary diversification. We studied multiple independent lake-stream population pairs of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). For each pair, we quantified adaptive divergence based on morphological traits that have a genetic basis and are subject to divergent selection. We then estimated gene flow based on variation at five unlinked microsatellite loci. We found a consistent and significant pattern for morphological divergence to be positively correlated with genetic divergence and negatively correlated with gene flow. Statistical significance and the amount of variation explained varied within and among traits: 36.1-74.1% for body depth and 11.8-51.7% for gill raker number. Variation within each trait was the result of differences among methods for estimating genetic divergence and gene flow. Variation among traits likely reflects different strengths of divergent selection. We conclude that gene flow has a substantial effect on adaptive divergence in nature but that the magnitude of this effect varies among traits. An alternative explanation is that cause and effect are reversed: adaptive divergence is instead constraining gene flow. This effect seems relatively unimportant for our system because genetic divergence and gene flow were not correlated with ecologically relevant habitat features of lakes (surface area) or streams (width, depth, flow, canopy openness).

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15562693     DOI: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01606.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evolution        ISSN: 0014-3820            Impact factor:   3.694


  54 in total

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4.  Can gene flow have negative demographic consequences? Mixed evidence from stream threespine stickleback.

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8.  Frequency dependence limits divergent evolution by favouring rare immigrants over residents.

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9.  Shared and unique morphological responses of stream fishes to anthropogenic habitat alteration.

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10.  Morphometrics parallel genetics in a newly discovered and endangered taxon of Galápagos tortoise.

Authors:  Ylenia Chiari; Chaz Hyseni; Tom H Fritts; Scott Glaberman; Cruz Marquez; James P Gibbs; Julien Claude; Adalgisa Caccone
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