Data from: Genetic divergence is decoupled from ecological diversification in the Hawaiian Nesosydne planthoppers
Adaptive radiation involves ecological shifts coupled with isolation of gene pools. However, we know little about what drives the initial stages of divergence. We study a system in which ecological diversification is found within a chronologically well-defined geological matrix to provide insight in...
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Zusammenfassung: | Adaptive radiation involves ecological shifts coupled with isolation of
gene pools. However, we know little about what drives the initial stages
of divergence. We study a system in which ecological diversification is
found within a chronologically well-defined geological matrix to provide
insight into this enigmatic phase of radiation. We tested the hypothesis
that a period of geographic isolation precedes ecological specialization
in an adaptive radiation of host-specialized Hawaiian planthoppers. We
examined population structure and history using mitochondrial and multiple
independent microsatellite loci in a species whose geographic distribution
on the island of Hawaii enabled us to observe the chronology of divergence
in its very earliest stages. We found that genetic divergence is
associated with geographic features but not different plant hosts and that
divergence times are very recent and on the same timescales as the dynamic
geology of the island. Our results suggest an important role for geography
in the dynamics of the early stages of divergence. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.400jc8bj |