...
首页> 外文期刊>Biological Journal of the Linnean Society >The scales of coevolution: comparative phylogeography and genetic demography of a locally adapted venomous predator and its prey
【24h】

The scales of coevolution: comparative phylogeography and genetic demography of a locally adapted venomous predator and its prey

机译:共划分的尺度:局部适应的有毒捕食者及其猎物的比较神奇地理和遗传文献

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Coevolutionary theory predicts that differences in the genetic demography of interacting species can influence patterns of local adaptation by affecting the potential of local populations to respond to selection. We conducted a comparative phylogeographical study of venomous rattlesnakes and their venom-resistant ground squirrel prey across California, and assessed how effective population size (N-e) estimates correspond with a previously documented pattern of rattlesnake local adaptation. Using RAD sequencing markers, we detected lineage relationships among both the rattlesnakes (Crotalus oreganus ssp.) and ground squirrels (Otospermophilus sp.) that are incongruent with previous phylogenetic hypotheses. Both rattlesnakes and squirrels share a deep divergence at the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. At this broad phylogeographical scale, we found that the locally adapted rattlesnakes had higher N-e than squirrels. At the population scale, snakes also had larger N-e accompanied by larger values of several metrics of population genetic diversity. However, the specific magnitude of local adaptation of venom activity to ground squirrel venom resistance was not significantly correlated with local differences in N-e or other diversity statistics between predator and prey populations, suggesting that other factors in the geographic mosaic of coevolution contribute to the specific local-scale outcomes of this interaction. These results suggest an evolutionary mechanism that may explain some (but clearly not all) of rattlesnake local adaptation in this coevolutionary interaction - larger population sizes raise the adaptive potential of rattlesnakes compared to ground squirrels.
机译:共同进化理论预测,相互作用物种的遗传人口学差异会影响当地种群对选择做出反应的潜力,从而影响当地的适应模式。我们在加利福尼亚州对有毒响尾蛇及其抗毒液的地松鼠猎物进行了比较系统地理学研究,并评估了有效种群规模(N-e)估计值与之前记录的响尾蛇当地适应模式的一致性。使用RAD测序标记,我们检测了这两种响尾蛇(Crotalus oreganus ssp.)之间的谱系关系以及与之前的系统发育假说不一致的地松鼠。响尾蛇和松鼠在萨克拉门托-圣华金河三角洲有着很深的分歧。在这个广泛的系统地理范围内,我们发现当地适应的响尾蛇比松鼠具有更高的N-e。在种群规模上,蛇也有较大的N-e值,并伴随着种群遗传多样性的几个指标的较大值。然而,毒液活动对地松鼠毒液抗性的局部适应程度与捕食者和猎物种群之间的N-e或其他多样性统计数据的局部差异不显著相关,这表明共同进化的地理镶嵌中的其他因素有助于这种相互作用的特定局部规模结果。这些结果表明了一种进化机制,可以解释响尾蛇在这种共同进化互动中的部分(但显然不是全部)局部适应——与地松鼠相比,较大的种群规模提高了响尾蛇的适应潜力。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号