Authors
Edward A Myers, Alexander T Xue, Marcelo Gehara, Christian L Cox, Alison R Davis Rabosky, Julio Lemos‐Espinal, Juan E Martínez‐Gómez, Frank T Burbrink
Publication date
2019/10
Journal
Molecular Ecology
Volume
28
Issue
20
Pages
4535-4548
Description
Genetic structure can be influenced by local adaptation to environmental heterogeneity and biogeographic barriers, resulting in discrete population clusters. Geographic distance among populations, however, can result in continuous clines of genetic divergence that appear as structured populations. Here, we evaluate the relevant importance of these three factors over a landscape characterized by environmental heterogeneity and the presence of a hypothesized biogeographic barrier in producing population genetic structure within 13 codistributed snake species using a genomic data set. We demonstrate that geographic distance and environmental heterogeneity across western North America contribute to population genomic divergence. Surprisingly, landscape features long thought to contribute to biogeographic barriers play little role in divergence community wide. Our results suggest that isolation by …
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