Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.

A central question linking ecology with evolutionary biology is how environmental heterogeneity can drive adaptive genetic divergence among populations. We examined adaptive divergence of four stream insects from six adjacent catchments in Japan by combining field measures of habitat and resource co...

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Main Authors: Kozo Watanabe, So Kazama, Tatsuo Omura, Michael T Monaghan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3969376?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-90f06978574b4d8186c66a90d15a0da72020-11-25T01:11:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0193e9305510.1371/journal.pone.0093055Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.Kozo WatanabeSo KazamaTatsuo OmuraMichael T MonaghanA central question linking ecology with evolutionary biology is how environmental heterogeneity can drive adaptive genetic divergence among populations. We examined adaptive divergence of four stream insects from six adjacent catchments in Japan by combining field measures of habitat and resource components with genome scans of non-neutral Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) loci. Neutral genetic variation was used to measure gene flow and non-neutral genetic variation was used to test for adaptive divergence. We identified the environmental characteristics contributing to divergence by comparing genetic distances at non-neutral loci between sites with Euclidean distances for each of 15 environmental variables. Comparisons were made using partial Mantel tests to control for geographic distance. In all four species, we found strong evidence for non-neutral divergence along environmental gradients at between 6 and 21 loci per species. The relative contribution of these environmental variables to each species' ecological niche was quantified as the specialization index, S, based on ecological data. In each species, the variable most significantly correlated with genetic distance at non-neutral loci was the same variable along which each species was most narrowly distributed (i.e., highest S). These were gradients of elevation (two species), chlorophyll-a, and ammonia-nitrogen. This adaptive divergence occurred in the face of ongoing gene flow (Fst = 0.01-0.04), indicating that selection was strong enough to overcome homogenization at the landscape scale. Our results suggest that adaptive divergence is pronounced, occurs along different environmental gradients for different species, and may consistently occur along the narrowest components of species' niche.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3969376?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kozo Watanabe
So Kazama
Tatsuo Omura
Michael T Monaghan
spellingShingle Kozo Watanabe
So Kazama
Tatsuo Omura
Michael T Monaghan
Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kozo Watanabe
So Kazama
Tatsuo Omura
Michael T Monaghan
author_sort Kozo Watanabe
title Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
title_short Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
title_full Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
title_fullStr Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
title_sort adaptive genetic divergence along narrow environmental gradients in four stream insects.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description A central question linking ecology with evolutionary biology is how environmental heterogeneity can drive adaptive genetic divergence among populations. We examined adaptive divergence of four stream insects from six adjacent catchments in Japan by combining field measures of habitat and resource components with genome scans of non-neutral Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) loci. Neutral genetic variation was used to measure gene flow and non-neutral genetic variation was used to test for adaptive divergence. We identified the environmental characteristics contributing to divergence by comparing genetic distances at non-neutral loci between sites with Euclidean distances for each of 15 environmental variables. Comparisons were made using partial Mantel tests to control for geographic distance. In all four species, we found strong evidence for non-neutral divergence along environmental gradients at between 6 and 21 loci per species. The relative contribution of these environmental variables to each species' ecological niche was quantified as the specialization index, S, based on ecological data. In each species, the variable most significantly correlated with genetic distance at non-neutral loci was the same variable along which each species was most narrowly distributed (i.e., highest S). These were gradients of elevation (two species), chlorophyll-a, and ammonia-nitrogen. This adaptive divergence occurred in the face of ongoing gene flow (Fst = 0.01-0.04), indicating that selection was strong enough to overcome homogenization at the landscape scale. Our results suggest that adaptive divergence is pronounced, occurs along different environmental gradients for different species, and may consistently occur along the narrowest components of species' niche.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3969376?pdf=render
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