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All grown‐up and nowhere to go: paedomorphosis and local adaptation in Ambystoma salamanders in the Cuenca Oriental of Mexico
Authors:Ruth Percino‐Daniel  Ernesto Recuero  Ella Vázquez‐Domínguez  Kelly R. Zamudio  Gabriela Parra‐Olea
Affiliation:1. Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, DF, México;2. Departamento de Ecología de la Biodiversidad, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, DF, México;3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA
Abstract:Facultative or obligate paedomorphosis has evolved several times in Mexican populations of the salamander genus Ambystoma, leading to increased genetic divergence among populations with alternate life histories and contributing to population divergence in this species complex. In the present study, we surveyed the genetic diversity of Ambystoma populations in lakes of the Cuenca Oriental, a high elevation closed drainage basin that encompasses permanent crater lakes harbouring salamander populations. We genotyped individuals from five populations aiming to better understand population dynamics and the evolution of paedomorphosis in this system. Specifically, we tested the hypotheses that the evolution of paedomorphosis in Ambystoma taylori resulted in reduced genetic exchange with populations of Ambystoma velasci in neighbouring lakes. Second, we tested whether the populations in brackish lakes of the Cuenca Oriental, Lake Atexcac, and Lake Alchichica show restricted gene flow across the basin, possibly as a result of local adaptation to those microhabitats. Using various indices of population genetic diversity, Bayesian assignment, and approximate Bayesian computation methods, we show that genetic exchange between brackish lakes and freshwater lakes is negligible, despite continued gene flow among freshwater lakes. We show that the first divergence among populations occurred between Alchichica and the remaining populations and that the evolution of paedomorphosis in A. taylori was likely favoured by local adaptation to saline conditions, thus increasing its genetic isolation. An apparently similar process appears to be in progress independently in lake Atexcac, showing that local adaptation may play an important role in population isolation and, ultimately, in speciation.
Keywords:Amphibia  gene flow  genetic diversity  microsatellites  population structure  salinity
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