Spatial Genetic Structure Patterns of Phenotype-Limited and Boundary-Limited Expanding Populations: A Simulation Study
Authored by Qian Wang, Qiang Dai, Xiangjiang Zhan, Bin Lu, Jinzhong Fu, Dunwu Qi
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085778
Sponsors:
National Natural Science Foundation of China, National Social Science Foundation of China
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
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Abstract
Range expansions may create a unique spatial genetic pattern
characterized by alternate genetically homogeneous domains and allele
frequency clines. Previous attempts to model range expansions have
mainly focused on the loss of genetic diversity during expansions. Using
individual-based models, we examined spatial genetic patterns under two
expansion scenarios, boundary-limited range expansions (BLRE) and
phenotype-limited range expansions (PhLRE). Our simulation revealed that
the genetic diversity within populations lost quickly during the range
expansion, while the genetic difference accumulated between populations.
Consequently, accompanying the expansions, the overall diversity
featured a slow decrease. Specifically, during BLREs, high speed of
boundary motion facilitated the maintenance of total genetic diversity
and sharpened genetic clines. Very slight constraints on boundary motion
of BLREs drastically narrowed the homogeneous domains and increased the
allele frequency fluctuations from those levels exhibited by PhLREs.
Even stronger constraints, however, surprisingly brought the width of
homogeneous domains and the allele frequency fluctuations back to the
normal levels of PhLREs. Furthermore, high migration rates maintained a
higher total genetic diversity than low ones did during PhLREs. Whereas, the total genetic diversities during BLREs showed a contrary pattern:
higher when migration was low than those when migration was high.
Besides, the increase of migration rates helped maintain a greater
number of homogeneous domains during PhLREs, but their effects on the
number of homogeneous domains during BLREs were not monotonous. Previous
studies have showed that the homogenous domains can merge to form a few
broad domains as the expansion went on, leading to fewer homogeneous
domains. Our simulations, meanwhile, revealed that the range expansions
could also rebuild homogeneous domains from the clines during the range
expansion. It is possible that that the number of homogeneous domains
was determined by the interaction of merging and newly emerging
homogeneous domains.
Tags
Evolution
differentiation
Diversity
Distributions
Climate-change
Distance
Mutations
Range expansion
Asteraceae
American