AI Article Synopsis

  • Population dynamics and genetic structure of Western Fence Lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) at the northern edge of their range around Puget Sound are influenced by recent post-glacial colonization and habitat requirements.
  • The study utilized genome-wide SNPs and morphological data to reveal significant population differentiation, identifying 8-10 distinct subpopulations, while finding minimal morphological variation among them.
  • Key factors contributing to population divergence include isolation, limited dispersal routes, and strict habitat needs, which may threaten their survival amid urbanization and habitat loss.

Article Abstract

Population dynamics within species at the edge of their distributional range, including the formation of genetic structure during range expansion, are difficult to study when they have had limited time to evolve. Western Fence Lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) have a patchy distribution at the northern edge of their range around the Puget Sound, Washington, where they almost exclusively occur on imperiled coastal habitats. The entire region was covered by Pleistocene glaciation as recently as 16,000 years ago, suggesting that populations must have colonized these habitats relatively recently. We tested for population differentiation across this landscape using genome-wide SNPs and morphological data. A time-calibrated species tree supports the hypothesis of a post-glacial establishment and subsequent population expansion into the region. Despite a strong signal for fine-scale population genetic structure across the Puget Sound with as many as 8-10 distinct subpopulations supported by the SNP data, there is minimal evidence for morphological differentiation at this same spatiotemporal scale. Historical demographic analyses suggest that populations expanded and diverged across the region as the Cordilleran Ice Sheet receded. Population isolation, lack of dispersal corridors, and strict habitat requirements are the key drivers of population divergence in this system. These same factors may prove detrimental to the future persistence of populations as they cope with increasing shoreline development associated with urbanization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9012774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-10233-9DOI Listing

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