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Evolutionary significance of stochastic forces and small populations

Evolutionary significance of stochastic forces and small populations. Coyne JA, Barton NH and Turelli M. 1997. A critique of Sewall Wright’s shifting balance theory of evolution. Evolution 51:643-671. Genetic differentiation. Evidence for population differentiation in plants is indisputable.

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Evolutionary significance of stochastic forces and small populations

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  1. Evolutionary significance of stochastic forces and small populations Coyne JA, Barton NH and Turelli M. 1997. A critique of Sewall Wright’s shifting balance theory of evolution. Evolution 51:643-671

  2. Genetic differentiation • Evidence for population differentiation in plants is indisputable. • Deterministic forces (Natural selection) • Stochastic processes (Genetic drift)

  3. Drift causes random changes in allele frequencies Simulated population; N = 10

  4. Determinants of drift N • small population size (N) • restricted dispersal (m) N N N population N neighbourhood

  5. Effective population size, Ne • a standardized measure of population size • size of an ‘idealized’ population with the same strength of genetic drift as the target population. - the census number (N), adjusted for skewed sex ratio, perenniality, selfing, persistent seed bank, ploidy, non-random variation in fecundity etc. - most cases, Ne is less than the actual count of individuals in the population (N)

  6. How important is chance? • Darwin (1859): acknowledged that historical accidents and chance could oppose the forces of natural selection • Gulick (1872): Hawaiian land snails • Hagedoorn, A. L. and Hagedoom, A. C. The Relative Value of the Processes Causing Evolution. Pp. 294. Martinus Nijhoff. The Hague, 1921.

  7. Wright and Fisher Fisher: adaptive evolution results simply from Darwinian mass selection. Wright: adaptation cannot be explained by selection alone. Stochastic processes such as genetic drift often play an important role.

  8. drift Shifting Balance Theory Fitness landscape selection selection Fitness Genotype/phenotype

  9. Coyne, Barton and Turelli 1997 “….it seems unreasonable to consider the shifting balance process as an important explanation for the evolution of adaptation”

  10. Role of small populations and genetic drift in the evolution of mating systems in Eichhornia paniculata

  11. Eichhornia paniculata • Pontederiaceae • short-lived perennial/annual • insect pollinated Ephemeral water bodies in Brazil, Cuba, Jamaica, parts of Central America

  12. Tristyly • 3 mating types • mating is disassortative and outcrossing • stable state: frequency-dependent selection maintains equal morphs frequencies

  13. N = 167 populations Estimate mating type frequencies

  14. Trimorphic = 118 Dimorphic = 42 Monomorphic = 7

  15. Mating type structure • Trimorphic populations near 1:1:1, or low on S • Most dimorphic pops missing the S morph; • All monomorphic pops are M

  16. How is mating system measured? 1. Need 8-10 half sib offspring from each of 20-30 mothers 2. Genotype mothers and offspring using genetic markers (allozymes, microsatellites, AFLPs) 3. Infer the genetic contribution of the paternal parent 4. Estimate the rate of outcrossing (t) that produces the distribution of offspring observed. S = 1-t Mother = AA AB AA? AB AB

  17. Population outcrossing rate varies with mating type diversity Cross-fertilizing 3-mating types Self-fertilizing 1 mating type

  18. Selfing variant of the M morph

  19. What evolutionary forces have caused the the loss of mating types and the transition from a stable outcrossing breeding system to self-fertilization? • Natural selection against the S morph, perhaps related to pollinator x mating type interactions • Stochastic events associated with small, short-lived populations Hypotheses

  20. Selection • Pollinator limitation: long-tongued solitary bees; may be unpredictable in small pops; S morphs may be most vulnerable Fertility in the field but S < M,L in 3 of 6 pops F = 0.31, p > 0.50

  21. Effective Population Size (Ne) • Individual-based simulations of tristylous populations • When Ne < 40, drift can overcome selection and cause the loss of mating types. • Ne < 10, more likely to lose two mating types.

  22. SsMm ssmm ssMm SsMM ssMM SSMm SSMM Mating types not lost equally S morph - most likely to be lost • frequency-dependent selection resists loss of morphs • if 1:1:1, all morphs equally likely to disappear due to sampling error • however, S allele is only carried by S morphs and thus cannot segregate from remaining L and M.

  23. Effective population size in 10 populations of E. paniculata Genetic method Sample allele frequencies over at least 2 years V(p) = Variance in allele freq. Ne

  24. Ne - Demographic method Five estimates Estimate # of individuals N, corrected for variation in among years N, corrected for variance in flower production N, corrected for mating type frequency N, corrected for self-fertilization

  25. Ne Mean N = 763 (range 30.5 - 5040) Mean Ne = 15.8 (range 3.4 - 70.6) Mean Ne / N = 0.106 Ne < 40 in 120 of 167 pops Ne/N Demography Temporal var = 0.47 Reprod effort = 0.42 Selfing rate = 0.98 Morph freq = 0.95

  26. Effect of drift on Spatial variation in morph structure Predictions Effective population size

  27. Spatial variation in mating type structure Dimorphic/monomorphic Trimorphic

  28. Temporal variation in frequency of S mating type S morph lost from pops

  29. Temporal variation in S as a function of N

  30. What accounts for the loss of the L morph? • Reproductive assurance: ability to self-fertilize in the absence of pollinators favours selfing M morph F=2.8, p = 0.13

  31. Why doesn’t the M morph spread in trimorphic populations? • pollinators not scarce in large pops • siring advantage doesn’t exist when S is present

  32. drift Fitness landscape selfing outcrossing selection selection Fitness Genotype/phenotype

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