4.7 Article

Environment not dispersal limitation drives clonal composition of Arctic Daphnia in a recently deglaciated area

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 23, Pages 5830-5842

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.13843

Keywords

climate change; colonization; founder effect; isolation-by-colonization; isolation-by-dispersal limitation; landscape genetics

Funding

  1. KU Leuven Research Fund Excellence Center [PF.2010.07]
  2. Franqui Research Professor Fellowship
  3. Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO) [G. 0468.10]
  4. Carlsberg Foundation [2013_01_0535]
  5. MARS Project (Managing Aquatic Ecosystems and Water Resources under Multiple Stress) under EU [603378]
  6. North Water Project (NOW)
  7. Velux Foundations
  8. Carlsberg Foundation
  9. Austrian Science Fund [P24442-B25]
  10. KU Leuven Research Fund [SF/12/009]
  11. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P24442] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
  12. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 24442] Funding Source: researchfish

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One of the most prominent manifestations of the ongoing climate warming is the retreat of glaciers and ice sheets around the world. Retreating glaciers result in the formation of new ponds and lakes, which are available for colonization. The gradual appearance of these new habitat patches allows us to determine to what extent the composition of asexual Daphnia (water flea) populations is affected by environmental drivers vs. dispersal limitation. Here, we used a landscape genetics approach to assess the processes structuring the clonal composition of species in the D. pulex species complex that have colonized periglacial habitats created by ice-sheet retreat in western Greenland. We analysed 61 populations from a young (< 50 years) and an old cluster (> 150 years) of lakes and ponds. We identified 42 asexual clones that varied widely in spatial distribution. Beta-diversity was higher among older than among younger systems. Lineage sorting by the environment explained 14% of the variation in clonal composition whereas the pure effect of geographical distance was very small and statistically insignificant (R-adj(2) = 0.010, P = 0.085). Dispersal limitation did not seem important, even among young habitat patches. The observation of several tens of clones colonizing the area combined with environmentally driven clonal composition of populations illustrates that population assembly of asexual species in the Arctic is structured by environmental gradients reflecting differences in the ecology of clones.

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