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Understanding the origin and distribution of genetic diversity across landscapes is critical for predicting the future of organisms in changing climates. This study investigated how adaptive and demographic forces have shaped diversity and population structure in Pinus densata, a keystone species on Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP). We examined the distribution of genomic diversity across the range of P. densata using exome capture sequencing. We applied spatially explicit tests to dissect the impacts of allele surfing, geographic isolation and environmental gradients on population differentiation and forecasted how this genetic legacy may limit the persistence of P. densata in future climates. We found that allele surfing from range expansion could explain the distribution of 39% of the c. 48 000 genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Uncorrected, these allele frequency clines severely confounded inferences of selection. After controlling for demographic processes, isolation-by-environment explained 9.2-19.5% of the genetic structure, with c. 4.0% of loci being affected by selection. Allele surfing and genotype-environment associations resulted in genomic mismatch under projected climate scenarios. We illustrate that significant local adaptation, when coupled with reduced diversity as a result of demographic history, constrains potential evolutionary response to climate change. The strong signal of genomic vulnerability in P. densata may be representative for other QTP endemics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.16619 | DOI Listing |
Evolution
July 2025
Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA.
Populations expanding their ranges experience unique evolutionary dynamics, with perhaps the most ubiquitous being an increased role for genetic drift. The increase in genetic drift during range expansion is predicted to increase the frequency of deleterious alleles along the expansion edge, termed expansion load, and therefore a reduction in fitness at the edge of expansions. While theoretical predictions of expansion load are well established, direct links between whole-genome estimates of load and decreases in an expanding population's fitness remain scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbstractDespite newly formed polyploids being subjected to myriad fitness consequences, the relative prevalence of polyploidy, both contemporarily and in ancestral branches of the tree of life, suggests alternative advantages that outweigh these consequences. One proposed advantage is that polyploids may more easily colonize novel habitats, such as deglaciated areas. However, previous research conducted in diploids suggests that range expansion comes with a fitness cost, as deleterious mutations may fix rapidly on the expansion front.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
September 2024
Laboratory for Population Ecology, Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, 33 Leninskii Pr., 119071 Moscow, Russia.
Colonizing populations at the leading edge of range expansion are expected to have a reduced genetic diversity and strong genetic structure caused by genetic drift and allele surfing. Until now, few studies have found the genetic signatures of allele surfing in expanding wild populations. Using mtDNA markers, we studied the genetic structure of the population of midday gerbils () expanding their range to the west in Kalmykia (southern Russia) following the new cycle of desertification, re-colonizing areas abandoned in the mid-2010s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
August 2024
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA.
Adaptive evolution can facilitate species' range expansions across environmentally heterogeneous landscapes. However, serial founder effects can limit the efficacy of selection, and the evolution of increased dispersal during range expansions may result in gene flow swamping local adaptation. Here, we study how genetic drift, gene flow and selection interact during the cane toad's (Rhinella marina) invasion across the heterogeneous landscape of Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReconstructing biological invasions from historical sources can provide insights into how they occur but are difficult to do when invasions are poorly documented. Genetic signatures left by invaders can also offer insights into invasion routes, points of origin and general biology but often present conclusions that are contradictory to expectations. Here, we test the ability of continental-wide microsatellite genotype data from 29 loci and 3122 samples to reconstruct the well-documented invasion of red foxes from the United Kingdom into Australia over 150 years ago, an invasion that has led to the extinction of many native species.
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