Selfing ability and drift load evolve with range expansion
Autor: | Nathan C. Layman, Carly J. Prior, Jeremiah W. Busch, Matthew H. Koski, Laura F. Galloway |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
bottleneck
0106 biological sciences Letter Range (biology) Baker's rule lcsh:Evolution Outcrossing Biology 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences postglacial range expansion 03 medical and health sciences Effective population size Genetic drift Refugium (population biology) heterosis lcsh:QH359-425 Genetics Inbreeding depression mating system Letters Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics 030304 developmental biology 0303 health sciences Selfing 15. Life on land Mating system expansion load Evolutionary biology genetic drift inbreeding depression |
Zdroj: | Evolution Letters, Vol 3, Iss 5, Pp 500-512 (2019) Evolution Letters |
ISSN: | 2056-3744 |
Popis: | Colonization at expanding range edges often involves few founders, reducing effective population size. This process can promote the evolution of self-fertilization, but implicating historical processes as drivers of trait evolution is often difficult and requires an explicit model of biogeographic history. In plants, contemporary limits to outcrossing are often invoked as evolutionary drivers of self-fertilization, but historical expansions may shape mating system diversity, with leading-edge populations evolving elevated selfing ability. In a widespread plant, Campanula americana, we identified a glacial refugium in the southern Appalachian Mountains from spatial patterns of genetic drift among 24 populations. Populations farther from this refugium have smaller effective sizes and fewer rare alleles. They also displayed elevated heterosis in among-population crosses, reflecting the accumulation of deleterious mutations during range expansion. Although populations with elevated heterosis had reduced segregating mutation load, the magnitude of inbreeding depression lacked geographic pattern. The ability to self-fertilize was strongly positively correlated with the distance from the refugium and mutation accumulation—a pattern that contrasts sharply with contemporary mate and pollinator limitation. In this and other species, diversity in sexual systems may reflect the legacy of evolution in small, colonizing populations, with little or no relation to the ecology of modern populations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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