Publication:
Admixture Determines Genetic Diversity and Population Differentiation in the Biological Invasion of a Lizard Species

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2008

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The Royal Society
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Kolbe, Jason J., Allan Larson, Jonathan B. Losos, and Kevin de Queiroz. 2008. Admixture determines genetic diversity and population differentiation in the biological invasion of a lizard species. Biology Letters 4(4): 434-437.

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Abstract

Molecular genetic analyses show that introduced populations undergoing biological invasions often bring together individuals from genetically disparate native-range source populations, which can elevate genotypic variation if these individuals interbreed. Differential admixture among multiple native-range sources explains mitochondrial haplotypic diversity within and differentiation among invasive populations of the lizard Anolis sagrei. Our examination of microsatellite variation supports the hypothesis that lizards from disparate native-range sources, identified using mtDNA haplotypes, form genetically admixed introduced populations. Furthermore, within-population genotypic diversity increases with the number of sources and among-population genotypic differentiation reflects disparity in their native-range sources. If adaptive genetic variation is similarly restructured, then the ability of invasive species to adapt to new conditions may be enhanced.

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multiple native-range sources, microsatellite, introduced species, mitochondrial DNA

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