Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Migration • Evolutionarily, this means the movement of alleles, or gene flow between populations • This will always be less than the movement of individuals Migration • When populations differ in allele frequencies, migration can be a powerful force Migration • Genetic patterns due to migration tend to be temporary • Over the longer term, migration is a homogenizing force—it makes populations more genetically similar D.R. Robertson Migration • Populations in Central and Eastern Pacific (divided by 5000 km of deep ocean) are not genetically different in these two reef fish species* *(and 18 out of 20 species studied: Lessios and Robertson 2006) D.R. Robertson Geographic variation in natural populations Often, morphology varies geographically from Futuyma (1998), p. 259 With low migration, allele frequencies vary greatly over small geographic distances As in pocket gophers... 1999 R.M. Timm from Futuyma (1998), p. 319 Geographic barriers to dispersal often separate genetically different populations Historical separations between Gulf of Mexico and SE Atlantic drainages from Avise (1994) from Avise (1994), p. 244 The Florida peninsula is a marine biogeographic barrier It forms a long-term historical barrier to migration and gene exchange (gene flow) within many species Natural selection creates patterns of geographic variation Clinal variation from Volpe and Rosenbaum (2000), p. 110 from Futuyma (2005) In D. melanogaster, the alcohol dehydrogenase (Adh) locus shows a cline—a regular change in frequency of a trait across a geographic transect from Futuyma (2005) The frequency of AdhF decreases towards the equator on 3 continents: these are parallel clines Clinal variation at lactate dehydrogenase-B in the mummichog Fundulus heteroclitus: Ldh-Bb increases towards the north This allozyme has a higher catalytic efficiency at lower temperatures Races and subspecies Subspecies of Northern flicker (Colaptes) Races and subspecies • A race is a geographic population with well defined, discrete differences in one or more traits Red-shafted C. auratus cafer • Taxonomically, races may be recognized and named as subspecies Yellow-shafted C. auratus auratus Color races of Heliconius butterflies geographic color races of H. erato geographic color races of H. melpomene these races display warning (aposematic) coloration to deter bird predation Allopatric color races Most animal color races are allopatric (they occupy nonoverlapping ranges) Each color race of dart-poison frogs (Dendrobaetes) lives on a different island in Bocas del Toro in western Panamá Parapatric races or subspecies share common borders from Futuyma (2005) Parapatric subspecies sometimes interbreed where their borders meet from Futuyma (1998), p. 258 Hamlets: sympatric races? • 11-12 forms of Hypoplectrus in Caribbean, Florida, Bahamas • Morphologically identical, but strikingly different color patterns • 6 “races” live together on the same reefs, and mate like-with-like Racial variation • morphological races • host races in insects – races feed and oviposit on different host plants – e.g. apple and hawthorn races of Rhagoletis • physiological races • sex races Physiological races Vermont: embryos survive 5 28 New Jersey: 5 - 28 Northern leopard frog Rana pipiens North Florida : 9 33 South Florida : 11 - Sex races from Futuyma (1998)