Affiliation:
1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2
2. Department of Applied Biological Sciences, Saga University, Saga 840-8502, Japan
Abstract
Species with broad ecological amplitudes with respect to a key focal resource, niche generalists, should maintain larger and more connected populations than niche specialists, leading to the prediction that nucleotide diversity will be lower and more subdivided in specialists relative to their generalist relatives. This logic describes the specialist-generalist variation hypothesis (SGVH). Some outbreeding species of
Caenorhabditis
nematodes use a variety of invertebrate dispersal vectors and have high molecular diversity. By contrast,
Caenorhabditis japonica
lives in a strict association and synchronized life cycle with its dispersal host, the shield bug
Parastrachia japonensis
, itself a diet specialist. Here, we characterize sequence variation for 20 nuclear loci to investigate how
C. japonica
's life history shapes nucleotide diversity. We find that
C. japonica
has more than threefold lower polymorphism than other outbreeding
Caenorhabditis
species, but that local populations are not genetically disconnected. Coupled with its restricted range, we propose that its specialist host association contributes to a smaller effective population size and lower genetic variation than host generalist
Caenorhabditis
species with outbreeding reproductive modes. A literature survey of diverse organisms provides broader support for the SGVH. These findings encourage further testing of ecological and evolutionary hypotheses with comparative population genetics in
Caenorhabditis
and other taxa.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
57 articles.
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