Authors
Rose L Andrew, Katherine L Ostevik, Daniel P Ebert, Loren H Rieseberg
Publication date
2012/5/1
Journal
Molecular ecology
Volume
21
Issue
9
Pages
2078-2091
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Isolation by adaptation increases divergence at neutral loci when natural selection against immigrants reduces the rate of gene flow between different habitats. This can occur early in the process of adaptive divergence and is a key feature of ecological speciation. Despite the ability of isolation by distance (IBD) and other forms of landscape resistance to produce similar patterns of neutral divergence within species, few studies have used landscape genetics to control for these other forces. We have studied the divergence of Helianthus petiolaris ecotypes living in active sand dunes and adjacent non‐dune habitat, using landscape genetics approaches, such as circuit theory and multiple regression of distance matrices, in addition to coalescent modelling. Divergence between habitats was significant, but not strong, and was shaped by IBD. We expected that increased resistance owing to patchy and unfavourable …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RL Andrew, KL Ostevik, DP Ebert, LH Rieseberg - Molecular ecology, 2012