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Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago

From Darwin's study of the Galapagos and Wallace's study of Indonesia, islands have played an important role in evolutionary investigations, and radiations within archipelagos are readily interpreted as supporting the conventional view of allopatric speciation. Even during the ongoing para...

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Autores principales: Thorpe, Roger S., Surget-Groba, Yann, Johansson, Helena
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2861690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20442860
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000929
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author Thorpe, Roger S.
Surget-Groba, Yann
Johansson, Helena
author_facet Thorpe, Roger S.
Surget-Groba, Yann
Johansson, Helena
author_sort Thorpe, Roger S.
collection PubMed
description From Darwin's study of the Galapagos and Wallace's study of Indonesia, islands have played an important role in evolutionary investigations, and radiations within archipelagos are readily interpreted as supporting the conventional view of allopatric speciation. Even during the ongoing paradigm shift towards other modes of speciation, island radiations, such as the Lesser Antillean anoles, are thought to exemplify this process. Geological and molecular phylogenetic evidence show that, in this archipelago, Martinique anoles provide several examples of secondary contact of island species. Four precursor island species, with up to 8 mybp divergence, met when their islands coalesced to form the current island of Martinique. Moreover, adjacent anole populations also show marked adaptation to distinct habitat zonation, allowing both allopatric and ecological speciation to be tested in this system. We take advantage of this opportunity of replicated island coalescence and independent ecological adaptation to carry out an extensive population genetic study of hypervariable neutral nuclear markers to show that even after these very substantial periods of spatial isolation these putative allospecies show less reproductive isolation than conspecific populations in adjacent habitats in all three cases of subsequent island coalescence. The degree of genetic interchange shows that while there is always a significant genetic signature of past allopatry, and this may be quite strong if the selection regime allows, there is no case of complete allopatric speciation, in spite of the strong primae facie case for it. Importantly there is greater genetic isolation across the xeric/rainforest ecotone than is associated with any secondary contact. This rejects the development of reproductive isolation in allopatric divergence, but supports the potential for ecological speciation, even though full speciation has not been achieved in this case. It also explains the paucity of anole species in the Lesser Antilles compared to the Greater Antilles.
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spelling pubmed-28616902010-05-04 Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago Thorpe, Roger S. Surget-Groba, Yann Johansson, Helena PLoS Genet Research Article From Darwin's study of the Galapagos and Wallace's study of Indonesia, islands have played an important role in evolutionary investigations, and radiations within archipelagos are readily interpreted as supporting the conventional view of allopatric speciation. Even during the ongoing paradigm shift towards other modes of speciation, island radiations, such as the Lesser Antillean anoles, are thought to exemplify this process. Geological and molecular phylogenetic evidence show that, in this archipelago, Martinique anoles provide several examples of secondary contact of island species. Four precursor island species, with up to 8 mybp divergence, met when their islands coalesced to form the current island of Martinique. Moreover, adjacent anole populations also show marked adaptation to distinct habitat zonation, allowing both allopatric and ecological speciation to be tested in this system. We take advantage of this opportunity of replicated island coalescence and independent ecological adaptation to carry out an extensive population genetic study of hypervariable neutral nuclear markers to show that even after these very substantial periods of spatial isolation these putative allospecies show less reproductive isolation than conspecific populations in adjacent habitats in all three cases of subsequent island coalescence. The degree of genetic interchange shows that while there is always a significant genetic signature of past allopatry, and this may be quite strong if the selection regime allows, there is no case of complete allopatric speciation, in spite of the strong primae facie case for it. Importantly there is greater genetic isolation across the xeric/rainforest ecotone than is associated with any secondary contact. This rejects the development of reproductive isolation in allopatric divergence, but supports the potential for ecological speciation, even though full speciation has not been achieved in this case. It also explains the paucity of anole species in the Lesser Antilles compared to the Greater Antilles. Public Library of Science 2010-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2861690/ /pubmed/20442860 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000929 Text en Thorpe et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thorpe, Roger S.
Surget-Groba, Yann
Johansson, Helena
Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title_full Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title_fullStr Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title_short Genetic Tests for Ecological and Allopatric Speciation in Anoles on an Island Archipelago
title_sort genetic tests for ecological and allopatric speciation in anoles on an island archipelago
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2861690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20442860
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000929
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