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Ocean currents mediate evolution in island lizards

Ryan Calsbeek () and Thomas B. Smith
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Ryan Calsbeek: University of California
Thomas B. Smith: University of California

Nature, 2003, vol. 426, issue 6966, 552-555

Abstract: Abstract Islands are considered to be natural laboratories in which to examine evolution because of the implicit assumption that limited gene flow allows tests of evolutionary processes in isolated replicates1. Here we show that this well-accepted idea requires re-examination. Island inundation during hurricanes can have devastating effects on lizard populations in the Bahamas2,3. After severe storms, islands may be recolonized by over-water dispersal of lizards from neighbouring islands3. High levels of gene flow may homogenize genes responsible for divergence, and are widely viewed as a constraining force on evolution4,5. Ultimately, the magnitude of gene flow determines the extent to which populations diverge from one another, and whether or not they eventually form new species6,7. We show that patterns of gene flow among island populations of Anolis lizards are best explained by prevailing ocean currents, and that over-water dispersal has evolutionary consequences. Across islands, divergence in fitness-related morphology decreases with increasing gene flow5. Results suggest that over-water dispersal after hurricanes constrains adaptive diversification in Anolis lizards, and that it may have an important but previously undocumented role in this classical example of adaptive radiation.

Date: 2003
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DOI: 10.1038/nature02143

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