The founding of Mauritian endemic coffee trees by a synchronous long-distance dispersal event
Authored by M D Nowak, B C Haller, A D Yoder
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12396
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Objective C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The stochastic process of long-distance dispersal is the exclusive means
by which plants colonize oceanic islands. Baker's rule posits that
self-incompatible plant lineages are unlikely to successfully colonize
oceanic islands because they must achieve a coordinated long-distance
dispersal of sufficiently numerous individuals to establish an
outcrossing founder population. Here, we show for the first time that
Mauritian Coffea species are self-incompatible and thus represent an
exception to Baker's rule. The genus Coffea (Rubiaceae) is composed of
approximately 124 species with a paleotropical distribution.
Phylogenetic evidence strongly supports a single colonization of the
oceanic island of Mauritius from either Madagascar or Africa. We employ
Bayesian divergence time analyses to show that the colonization of
Mauritius was not a recent event. We genotype S-RNase alleles from
Mauritian endemic Coffea, and using S-allele gene genealogies, we show
that the Mauritian allelic diversity is confined to just seven deeply
divergent Coffea S-RNase allelic lineages. Based on these data, we
developed an individual-based model and performed a simulation study to
estimate the most likely number of founding individuals involved in the
colonization of Mauritius. Our simulations show that to explain the
observed S-RNase allelic diversity, the founding population was likely
composed of fewer than 31 seeds that were likely synchronously dispersed
from an ancestral mainland species.
Tags
Self-incompatibility locus
Bakers law
Population-genetics
Adaptive
radiation
Breeding systems
Plastid dna
Rubiaceae
Polymorphism
Solanaceae
Islands