Historical demographic dynamics underlying local adaptation in the presence of gene flow

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Abstract

The range of a species is the result of the relative contribution of spatial tracking of environmental requirements and adaptation to ecological conditions outside the ancestral niche. The appearance of novel habitats caused by climatic oscillation can promote range expansion and accompanying demographic growth. The demographic dynamics of populations leave a signal in \ patterns. We modeled three competing scenarios pertaining to the circumstance of a range expansion by the Karoo Scrub-Robin into newly available habitat resulting from the increasing aridification of southern Africa. Genetic variation was contrasted with the theoretical expectations of a spatial range expansion, and compared with data of a putative adaptive trait. We infer that this bird likely colonized the arid zone, as a consequence of adaptive evolution in a small peripheral population, followed by an expansion with recurrent exchange of migrants with the ancestral populations. © 2012 The Authors.

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Ribeiro, Â. M., Lopes, R. J., & Bowie, R. C. K. (2012). Historical demographic dynamics underlying local adaptation in the presence of gene flow. Ecology and Evolution, 2(11), 2710–2721. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.390

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