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Divergent evolutionary processes associated with colonization of offshore islands
Authors:Rahel Struchen  Marine Pascal  Michel Pascal  Martin C Fischer  Thomas Higham  Selina Brace  Simon Y W Ho  Jean‐Pierre Quéré  Paul O'Higgins  Laurent Excoffier  Gerald Heckel  A Rus Hoelzel  Jeremy B Searle
Institution:1. Computational and Molecular Population Genetics (CMPG), Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern, , Bern, CH‐3012 Switzerland;2. équipe écologie des Invasions Biologiques, INRA, , Rennes Cedex, France;3. Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Genopode, , Lausanne, CH‐1015 Switzerland;4. Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit, Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art (RLAHA), , Oxford, OX1 3QY UK;5. School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, , Egham, TW20 0EX UK;6. School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, , Sydney, NSW, 2006 Australia;7. UMR CBGP (INRA/IRD/Cirad/Montpellier SupAgro), INRA, , F‐34988 Montferrier‐sur‐Lez cedex, France;8. Centre for Anatomical and Human Sciences, Hull York Medical School (HYMS), University of York, , York, YO10 5DD UK;9. School of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Durham University, , Durham, DH1 3LE UK
Abstract:Oceanic islands have been a test ground for evolutionary theory, but here, we focus on the possibilities for evolutionary study created by offshore islands. These can be colonized through various means and by a wide range of species, including those with low dispersal capabilities. We use morphology, modern and ancient sequences of cytochrome b (cytb) and microsatellite genotypes to examine colonization history and evolutionary change associated with occupation of the Orkney archipelago by the common vole (Microtus arvalis), a species found in continental Europe but not in Britain. Among possible colonization scenarios, our results are most consistent with human introduction at least 5100 bp (confirmed by radiocarbon dating). We used approximate Bayesian computation of population history to infer the coast of Belgium as the possible source and estimated the evolutionary timescale using a Bayesian coalescent approach. We showed substantial morphological divergence of the island populations, including a size increase presumably driven by selection and reduced microsatellite variation likely reflecting founder events and genetic drift. More surprisingly, our results suggest that a recent and widespread cytb replacement event in the continental source area purged cytb variation there, whereas the ancestral diversity is largely retained in the colonized islands as a genetic ‘ark’. The replacement event in the continental M. arvalis was probably triggered by anthropogenic causes (land‐use change). Our studies illustrate that small offshore islands can act as field laboratories for studying various evolutionary processes over relatively short timescales, informing about the mainland source area as well as the island.
Keywords:demographic analysis  genetic replacement  island colonization     Microtus arvalis     phylogeography
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