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Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations

Species distributed along mountain slopes, facing contrasting habitats in short geographic scale, are of particular interest to test how ecologically based divergent selection promotes phenotypic and genetic disparities as well as to assess isolation‐by‐environment mechanisms. Here, we conduct the f...

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Autores principales: Feijó, Anderson, Wen, Zhixin, Cheng, Jilong, Ge, Deyan, Xia, Lin, Yang, Qisen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6662404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31380035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5273
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author Feijó, Anderson
Wen, Zhixin
Cheng, Jilong
Ge, Deyan
Xia, Lin
Yang, Qisen
author_facet Feijó, Anderson
Wen, Zhixin
Cheng, Jilong
Ge, Deyan
Xia, Lin
Yang, Qisen
author_sort Feijó, Anderson
collection PubMed
description Species distributed along mountain slopes, facing contrasting habitats in short geographic scale, are of particular interest to test how ecologically based divergent selection promotes phenotypic and genetic disparities as well as to assess isolation‐by‐environment mechanisms. Here, we conduct the first broad comparative study of phenotypic variation along elevational gradients, integrating a large array of ecological predictors and disentangling population genetic driver processes. The skull form of nine ecologically distinct species distributed over a large altitudinal range (100–4200 m) was compared to assess whether phenotypic divergence is a common phenomenon in small mammals and whether it shows parallel patterns. We also investigated the relative contribution of biotic (competition and predation) and abiotic parameters on phenotypic divergence via mixed models. Finally, we assessed the population genetic structure of a rodent species (Niviventer confucianus) via analysis of molecular variance and F(ST) along three mountain slopes and tested the isolation‐by‐environment hypothesis using Mantel test and redundancy analysis. We found a consistent phenotypic divergence and marked genetic structure along elevational gradients; however, the species showed mixed patterns of size and skull shape trends across mountain zones. Individuals living at lower altitudes differed greatly in both phenotype and genotype from those living at high elevations, while middle‐elevation individuals showed more intermediate forms. The ecological parameters associated with phenotypic divergence along elevation gradients are partly related to species' ecological and evolutionary constraints. Fossorial and solitary animals are mainly affected by climatic factors, while terrestrial and more gregarious species are influenced by biotic and abiotic parameters. A novel finding of our study is that predator richness emerged as an important factor associated with the intraspecific diversification of the mammalian skull along elevational gradients, a previously overlooked parameter. Population genetic structure was mainly driven by environmental heterogeneity along mountain slopes, with no or a week spatial effect, fitting the isolation‐by‐environment scenario. Our study highlights the strong and multifaceted effects of heterogeneous steep habitats and ecologically based divergent selective forces in small mammal populations.
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spelling pubmed-66624042019-08-02 Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations Feijó, Anderson Wen, Zhixin Cheng, Jilong Ge, Deyan Xia, Lin Yang, Qisen Ecol Evol Original Research Species distributed along mountain slopes, facing contrasting habitats in short geographic scale, are of particular interest to test how ecologically based divergent selection promotes phenotypic and genetic disparities as well as to assess isolation‐by‐environment mechanisms. Here, we conduct the first broad comparative study of phenotypic variation along elevational gradients, integrating a large array of ecological predictors and disentangling population genetic driver processes. The skull form of nine ecologically distinct species distributed over a large altitudinal range (100–4200 m) was compared to assess whether phenotypic divergence is a common phenomenon in small mammals and whether it shows parallel patterns. We also investigated the relative contribution of biotic (competition and predation) and abiotic parameters on phenotypic divergence via mixed models. Finally, we assessed the population genetic structure of a rodent species (Niviventer confucianus) via analysis of molecular variance and F(ST) along three mountain slopes and tested the isolation‐by‐environment hypothesis using Mantel test and redundancy analysis. We found a consistent phenotypic divergence and marked genetic structure along elevational gradients; however, the species showed mixed patterns of size and skull shape trends across mountain zones. Individuals living at lower altitudes differed greatly in both phenotype and genotype from those living at high elevations, while middle‐elevation individuals showed more intermediate forms. The ecological parameters associated with phenotypic divergence along elevation gradients are partly related to species' ecological and evolutionary constraints. Fossorial and solitary animals are mainly affected by climatic factors, while terrestrial and more gregarious species are influenced by biotic and abiotic parameters. A novel finding of our study is that predator richness emerged as an important factor associated with the intraspecific diversification of the mammalian skull along elevational gradients, a previously overlooked parameter. Population genetic structure was mainly driven by environmental heterogeneity along mountain slopes, with no or a week spatial effect, fitting the isolation‐by‐environment scenario. Our study highlights the strong and multifaceted effects of heterogeneous steep habitats and ecologically based divergent selective forces in small mammal populations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6662404/ /pubmed/31380035 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5273 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Feijó, Anderson
Wen, Zhixin
Cheng, Jilong
Ge, Deyan
Xia, Lin
Yang, Qisen
Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title_full Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title_fullStr Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title_full_unstemmed Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title_short Divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
title_sort divergent selection along elevational gradients promotes genetic and phenotypic disparities among small mammal populations
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6662404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31380035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5273
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