A METAPOPULATION PERSPECTIVE ON GENETIC DIVERSITY AND DIFFERENTIATION IN PARTIALLY SELF-FERTILIZING PLANTS
- 1 December 2002
- Vol. 56 (12) , 2368-2373
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb00162.x
Abstract
Partial self-fertilization is common in higher plants. Mating system variation is known to have important consequences for how genetic variation is distributed within and among populations. Selfing is known to reduce effective population size, and inbreeding species are therefore expected to have lower levels of genetic variation than comparable outcrossing taxa. However, several recent empirical studies have shown that reductions in genetic diversity within populations of inbreeding species are far greater than the expected reductions based on the reduced effective population size. Two different processes have been argued to cause these patterns, selective sweeps (or hitchhiking) and background selection. Both are expected to be most effective in reducing genetic variation in regions of low recombination rates. Selfing is known to reduce the effective recombination rate, and inbreeding taxa are thus thought to be particularly vulnerable to the effects of hitchhiking or background selection. Here I propose a third explanation for the lower-than-expected levels of genetic diversity within populations of selfing species; recurrent extinctions and recolonizations of local populations, also known as metapopulation dynamics. I show that selfing in a metapopulation setting can result in large reductions in genetic diversity within populations, far greater than expected based the lower effective population size inbreeding species is expected to have. The reason for this depends on an interaction between selfing and pollen migration.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic diversity in Leavenworthia populations with different inbreeding levelsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1998
- Genetic diversity in partially selfing populations with the stepping-stone structureHeredity, 1996
- Effects of life history traits on genetic diversity in plant speciesPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1996
- Mating system, bottlenecks and genetic polymorphism in hermaphroditic animalsGenetics Research, 1995
- Chloroplast DNA and Isozyme Diversity in Two Mimulus Species (Scrophulariaceae) with Contrasting Mating SystemsAmerican Journal of Botany, 1992
- Temporal Fluctuations in Demographic Parameters and the Genetic Variance among PopulationsEvolution, 1992
- Genetic variability and geographical structure in partially selfing populations.The Japanese Journal of Genetics, 1992
- A note on the relationship between outcrossing rate and gene flow in plantsHeredity, 1988
- Self-Compatibility and Establishment After 'Long-Distance' DispersalEvolution, 1955
- THE GENETICAL STRUCTURE OF POPULATIONSAnnals of Eugenics, 1949