Journal article

Testing evolutionary hypotheses about species borders: patterns of genetic variation towards the southern borders of two rainforest Drosophila and a related habitat generalist.

B van Heerwaarden, V Kellermann, M Schiffer, M Blacket, CM Sgrò, AA Hoffmann

Proceedings. Biological sciences / The Royal Society | ROYAL SOC | Published : 2009

Abstract

Several evolutionary hypotheses help explain why only some species adapt readily to new conditions and expand distributions beyond borders, but there is limited evidence testing these hypotheses. In this study, we consider patterns of neutral (microsatellite) and quantitative genetic variation in traits in three species of Drosophila from the montium species group in eastern Australia. We found little support for restricted or asymmetrical gene flow in any species. In rainforest-restricted Drosophila birchii, there was evidence of selection for increased desiccation and starvation resistance towards the southern border, and a reduction in genetic diversity in desiccation resistance at this b..

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Funding Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Cherie Marks, Jennifer Griffiths, Rebecca Hallas, Jennifer Shirriffs and Rhonda Rawlinson for their technical assistance; Jon Bridle for some field lines and the Australian Research Council for funding via their Special Research Centre and Fellowship schemes (A.A.H., C.M.S.).