Literature DB >> 34304245

A role of asynchrony of seasons in explaining genetic differentiation in a Neotropical toad.

Maria Tereza C Thomé1,2, Bryan C Carstens3, Miguel Trefaut Rodrigues4, Pedro Manoel Galetti5, João Alexandrino6, Célio F B Haddad7.   

Abstract

The process of diversification can be studied at the phylogeographic level by attempting to identify the environmental features that promote and maintain population divergence. Here we investigate diversification in Rhinella granulosa, a Neotropical toad from northeastern Brazil, by testing a range of hypotheses that encompass different putative mechanisms reducing gene flow among populations. We sequenced single nucleotide polymorphisms and examined individual predictions related to the role of geographic barriers (rivers), ecological gradients, historical habitat stability, and spatial variation in climate seasonality, also known as the asynchrony of seasons hypothesis. This hypothesis postulates that temporal asynchrony of wet and dry seasons over short distances causes parapatric populations to become isolated by time. After determining genetic structure, inferring past distributions, ranking demographic models, and estimating the power of monthly climatic variables, our results identified two populations that are not associated with geographic barriers, biome gradients, or historical refugia. Instead, they are predicted by spatial variation in monthly rainfall and minimum temperature, consistent with the asynchrony of seasons hypothesis, supported also by our comparative framework using multiple matrix regression and linear mixed effects modeling. Due to the toad's life history, climate likely mediates gene flow directly, with genetic differentiation being provoked by neutral mechanisms related to climate driven population isolation, and/or by natural selection against migrants from populations with different breeding times. The asynchrony of seasons hypothesis is seldom considered in phylogeographic studies, but our results indicate that it should be tested in systems where breeding is tightly coupled with climate.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Genetics Society.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34304245      PMCID: PMC8478927          DOI: 10.1038/s41437-021-00460-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)        ISSN: 0018-067X            Impact factor:   3.832


  37 in total

1.  Wet periods in northeastern Brazil over the past 210 kyr linked to distant climate anomalies.

Authors:  Xianfeng Wang; Augusto S Auler; R Lawrence Edwards; Hai Cheng; Patricia S Cristalli; Peter L Smart; David A Richards; Chuan-Chou Shen
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-12-09       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Isolation by Distance.

Authors:  S Wright
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1943-03       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  Simulating Arctic climate warmth and icefield retreat in the last interglaciation.

Authors:  Bette L Otto-Bliesner; Shawn J Marshall; Jonathan T Overpeck; Gifford H Miller; Aixue Hu
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-03-24       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Examining the full effects of landscape heterogeneity on spatial genetic variation: a multiple matrix regression approach for quantifying geographic and ecological isolation.

Authors:  Ian J Wang
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2013-05-11       Impact factor: 3.694

5.  fastsimcoal: a continuous-time coalescent simulator of genomic diversity under arbitrarily complex evolutionary scenarios.

Authors:  Laurent Excoffier; Matthieu Foll
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2011-03-12       Impact factor: 6.937

Review 6.  The role of allochrony in speciation.

Authors:  Rebecca S Taylor; Vicki L Friesen
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2017-05-05       Impact factor: 6.185

7.  PHRAPL: Phylogeographic Inference Using Approximate Likelihoods.

Authors:  Nathon D Jackson; Ariadna E Morales; Bryan C Carstens; Brian C O'Meara
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2017-11-01       Impact factor: 15.683

8.  Asynchrony of seasons: genetic differentiation associated with geographic variation in climatic seasonality and reproductive phenology.

Authors:  Ignacio Quintero; Sebastián González-Caro; Paul-Camilo Zalamea; Carlos Daniel Cadena
Journal:  Am Nat       Date:  2014-08-06       Impact factor: 3.926

9.  Did the pleistocene glaciations promote divergence? Tests of explicit refugial models in montane grasshopprers.

Authors:  L L Knowles
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 6.185

10.  Biogeographic history and cryptic diversity of saxicolous Tropiduridae lizards endemic to the semiarid Caatinga.

Authors:  Fernanda P Werneck; Rafael N Leite; Silvia R Geurgas; Miguel T Rodrigues
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2015-05-23       Impact factor: 3.260

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  2 in total

1.  Contrasting environmental drivers of genetic and phenotypic divergence in an Andean poison frog (Epipedobates anthonyi).

Authors:  Mónica I Páez-Vacas; Daryl R Trumbo; W Chris Funk
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2021-10-30       Impact factor: 3.821

2.  Assessing model adequacy for Bayesian Skyline plots using posterior predictive simulation.

Authors:  Emanuel M Fonseca; Drew J Duckett; Filipe G Almeida; Megan L Smith; Maria Tereza C Thomé; Bryan C Carstens
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 3.752

  2 in total

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