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Microsatellite variation suggests a recent fine-scale population structure of Drosophila sechellia, a species endemic of the Seychelles archipelago
Authors:Delphine Legrand  Dominique Vautrin  Daniel Lachaise  Marie-Louise Cariou
Affiliation:1.UMR 7204, MNHN-CNRS-UPMC,Brunoy,France;2.Station d’Ecologie Expérimentale, USR2936, CNRS,Moulis,France;3.Laboratoire Evolution, Génomes et Spéciation, UPR 9034,CNRS, Avenue de la Terrasse, Batiment 13, Boite Postale 1,Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex,France;4.Université Paris-Sud 11,Orsay Cedex,France
Abstract:Drosophila sechellia is closely related to the cosmopolitan and widespread model species, D. simulans. This species, endemic to the Seychelles archipelago, is specialized on the fruits of Morinda citrifolia, and harbours the lowest overall genetic diversity compared to other species of Drosophila. This low diversity is associated with a small population size. In addition, no obvious population structure has been evidenced so far across islands of the Seychelles archipelago. Here, a microsatellite panel of 17 loci in ten populations from nine islands of the Seychelles was used to assess the effect of the D. sechellia’s fragmented distribution on the fine-scale population genetic structure, the migration pattern, as well as on the demography of the species. Contrary to previous results, also based on microsatellites, no evidence for population contraction in D. sechellia was found. The results confirm previous studies based on gene sequence polymorphism that showed a long-term stable population size for this species. Interestingly, a pattern of Isolation By Distance which had not been described yet in D. sechellia was found, with evidence of first-generation migrants between some neighbouring islands. Bayesian structuring algorithm results were consistent with a split of D. sechellia into two main groups of populations: Silhouette/Mahé versus all the other islands. Thus, microsatellites suggest that variability in D. sechellia is most likely explained by local genetic exchanges between neighbouring islands that have recently resulted in slight differentiation of the two largest island populations from all the others.
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