Panmixia across elevation in thermally sensitive Andean dung beetles


Abstract:

Janzen's seasonality hypothesis pbkp_redicts that organisms inhabiting environments with limited climatic variability will evolve a reduced thermal tolerance breadth compared with organisms experiencing greater climatic variability. In turn, narrow tolerance breadth may select against dispersal across strong temperature gradients, such as those found across elevation. This can result in narrow elevational ranges and generate a pattern of isolation by environment or neutral genetic differentiation correlated with environmental variables that are independent of geographic distance. We tested for signatures of isolation by environment across elevation using genome-wide SNP data from five species of Andean dung beetles (subfamily Scarabaeinae) with well-characterized, narrow thermal physiologies, and narrow elevational distributions. Contrary to our expectations, we found no evidence of population genetic structure associated with elevation and little signal of isolation by environment. Further, elevational ranges for four of five species appear to be at equilibrium and show no decay of genetic diversity at range limits. Taken together, these results suggest physiological constraints on dispersal may primarily operate outside of a stable realized niche and point to a lower bound on the spatial scale of local adaptation.

Año de publicación:

2020

Keywords:

  • mountain passes
  • Scarabaeinae
  • climatic variability hypothesis
  • isolation by environment
  • ECUADOR
  • tropics

Fuente:

googlegoogle
scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Ecología
  • Ecología

Áreas temáticas:

  • Temas específicos de historia natural de los animales
  • Historia natural de los organismos
  • Arthropoda