Genetic analysis of complex demographic scenarios: Spatially expanding populations of the cane toad, Bufo marinus


Autoria(s): Estoup, A.; Beaumont, Mark; Sennedot, Florent; Moritz, Craig; Cornuet, Jean-Marie
Contribuinte(s)

D.M. Waller

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Inferring the spatial expansion dynamics of invading species from molecular data is notoriously difficult due to the complexity of the processes involved. For these demographic scenarios, genetic data obtained from highly variable markers may be profitably combined with specific sampling schemes and information from other sources using a Bayesian approach. The geographic range of the introduced toad Bufo marinus is still expanding in eastern and northern Australia, in each case from isolates established around 1960. A large amount of demographic and historical information is available on both expansion areas. In each area, samples were collected along a transect representing populations of different ages and genotyped at 10 microsatellite loci. Five demographic models of expansion, differing in the dispersal pattern for migrants and founders and in the number of founders, were considered. Because the demographic history is complex, we used an approximate Bayesian method, based on a rejection-regression algorithm. to formally test the relative likelihoods of the five models of expansion and to infer demographic parameters. A stepwise migration-foundation model with founder events was statistically better supported than other four models in both expansion areas. Posterior distributions supported different dynamics of expansion in the studied areas. Populations in the eastern expansion area have a lower stable effective population size and have been founded by a smaller number of individuals than those in the northern expansion area. Once demographically stabilized, populations exchange a substantial number of effective migrants per generation in both expansion areas, and such exchanges are larger in northern than in eastern Australia. The effective number of migrants appears to be considerably lower than that of founders in both expansion areas. We found our inferences to be relatively robust to various assumptions on marker. demographic, and historical features. The method presented here is the only robust, model-based method available so far, which allows inferring complex population dynamics over a short time scale. It also provides the basis for investigating the interplay between population dynamics, drift, and selection in invasive species.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:69086

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Society for the Study of Evolution

Palavras-Chave #Ecology #Evolutionary Biology #Genetics & Heredity #Approximate Bayesian Computation #Demographic Inferences #Invasive Species #Microsatellites #Rejection-sampling Algorithm #Spatially Expanding Populations #Maximum-likelihood-estimation #Chain Monte-carlo #Introduced Populations #Ecological Genetics #Coalescent Approach #Range Expansion #Giant Toad #Evolution #History #C1 #270203 Population and Ecological Genetics #779904 Control of pests and exotic species #0603 Evolutionary Biology
Tipo

Journal Article