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Drift versus selection as drivers of phenotypic divergence at small spatial scales: The case of Belgjarskógur threespine stickleback. / Seymour, Mathew; Räsänen, Katja; Kristjánsson, Bjarni K.
Yn: Ecology and Evolution, Cyfrol 9, Rhif 14, 07.2019, t. 8133-8145.

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Seymour, M, Räsänen, K & Kristjánsson, BK 2019, 'Drift versus selection as drivers of phenotypic divergence at small spatial scales: The case of Belgjarskógur threespine stickleback', Ecology and Evolution, cyfrol. 9, rhif 14, tt. 8133-8145. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5381

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Seymour M, Räsänen K, Kristjánsson BK. Drift versus selection as drivers of phenotypic divergence at small spatial scales: The case of Belgjarskógur threespine stickleback. Ecology and Evolution. 2019 Gor;9(14):8133-8145. Epub 2019 Meh 27. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5381

Author

Seymour, Mathew ; Räsänen, Katja ; Kristjánsson, Bjarni K. / Drift versus selection as drivers of phenotypic divergence at small spatial scales: The case of Belgjarskógur threespine stickleback. Yn: Ecology and Evolution. 2019 ; Cyfrol 9, Rhif 14. tt. 8133-8145.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Drift versus selection as drivers of phenotypic divergence at small spatial scales: The case of Belgjarskógur threespine stickleback

AU - Seymour, Mathew

AU - Räsänen, Katja

AU - Kristjánsson, Bjarni K.

PY - 2019/7

Y1 - 2019/7

N2 - Divergence in phenotypic traits is facilitated by a combination of natural selection, phenotypic plasticity, gene flow, and genetic drift, whereby the role of drift is expected to be particularly important in small and isolated populations. Separating the components of phenotypic divergence is notoriously difficult, particularly for multivariate phenotypes. Here, we assessed phenotypic divergence of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) across 19 semi‐interconnected ponds within a small geographic region (~7.5 km2) using comparisons of multivariate phenotypic divergence (PST), neutral genetic (FST), and environmental (EST) variation. We found phenotypic divergence across the ponds in a suite of functionally relevant phenotypic traits, including feeding, defense, and swimming traits, and body shape (geometric morphometric). Comparisons of PSTs with FSTs suggest that phenotypic divergence is predominantly driven by neutral processes or stabilizing selection, whereas phenotypic divergence in defensive traits is in accordance with divergent selection. Comparisons of population pairwise PSTs with ESTs suggest that phenotypic divergence in swimming traits is correlated with prey availability, whereas there were no clear associations between phenotypic divergence and environmental difference in the other phenotypic groups. Overall, our results suggest that phenotypic divergence of these small populations at small geographic scales is largely driven by neutral processes (gene flow, drift), although environmental determinants (natural selection or phenotypic plasticity) may play a role.

AB - Divergence in phenotypic traits is facilitated by a combination of natural selection, phenotypic plasticity, gene flow, and genetic drift, whereby the role of drift is expected to be particularly important in small and isolated populations. Separating the components of phenotypic divergence is notoriously difficult, particularly for multivariate phenotypes. Here, we assessed phenotypic divergence of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) across 19 semi‐interconnected ponds within a small geographic region (~7.5 km2) using comparisons of multivariate phenotypic divergence (PST), neutral genetic (FST), and environmental (EST) variation. We found phenotypic divergence across the ponds in a suite of functionally relevant phenotypic traits, including feeding, defense, and swimming traits, and body shape (geometric morphometric). Comparisons of PSTs with FSTs suggest that phenotypic divergence is predominantly driven by neutral processes or stabilizing selection, whereas phenotypic divergence in defensive traits is in accordance with divergent selection. Comparisons of population pairwise PSTs with ESTs suggest that phenotypic divergence in swimming traits is correlated with prey availability, whereas there were no clear associations between phenotypic divergence and environmental difference in the other phenotypic groups. Overall, our results suggest that phenotypic divergence of these small populations at small geographic scales is largely driven by neutral processes (gene flow, drift), although environmental determinants (natural selection or phenotypic plasticity) may play a role.

KW - FST

KW - PST

KW - adaptive divergence

KW - multivariate phenotype

KW - plasticity

KW - stickleback

U2 - 10.1002/ece3.5381

DO - 10.1002/ece3.5381

M3 - Article

C2 - 31380077

VL - 9

SP - 8133

EP - 8145

JO - Ecology and Evolution

JF - Ecology and Evolution

SN - 2045-7758

IS - 14

ER -