How to translate text using browser tools
1 August 2004 APPLICATION OF JOHNSON ET AL.'S SPECIATION THRESHOLD MODEL TO APPARENT COLONIZATION TIMES OF ISLAND BIOTAS
Robert E. Ricklefs, Eldredge Bermingham
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Understanding patterns of diversity can be furthered by analysis of the dynamics of colonization, speciation, and extinction on islands using historical information provided by molecular phylogeography. The land birds of the Lesser Antilles are one of the most thoroughly described regional faunas in this context. In an analysis of colonization times, Ricklefs and Bermingham (2001) found that the cumulative distribution of lineages with respect to increasing time since colonization exhibits a striking change in slope at a genetic distance of about 2% mitochondrial DNA sequence divergence (about one million years). They further showed how this heterogeneity could be explained by either an abrupt increase in colonization rates or a mass extinction event. Cherry et al. (2002), referring to a model developed by Johnson et al. (2000), argued instead that the pattern resulted from a speciation threshold for reproductive isolation of island populations from their continental source populations. Prior to this threshold, genetic divergence is slowed by migration from the source, and species of varying age accumulate at a low genetic distance. After the threshold is reached, source and island populations diverge more rapidly, creating heterogeneity in the distribution of apparent ages of island taxa. We simulated of Johnson et al.'s speciation-threshold model, incorporating genetic divergence at rate k and fixation at rate M of genes that have migrated between the source and the island population. Fixation resets the divergence clock to zero. The speciation-threshold model fits the distribution of divergence times of Lesser Antillean birds well with biologically plausible parameter estimates. Application of the model to the Hawaiian avifauna, which does not exhibit marked heterogeneity of genetic divergence, and the West Indian herpetofauna, which does, required unreasonably high migration-fixation rates, several orders of magnitude greater than the colonization rate. However, the plausibility of the speciation-divergence model for Lesser Antillean birds emphasizes the importance of further investigation of historical biogeography on a regional scale for whole biotas, as well as the migration of genes between populations on long time scales and the achievement of reproductive isolation.

Robert E. Ricklefs and Eldredge Bermingham "APPLICATION OF JOHNSON ET AL.'S SPECIATION THRESHOLD MODEL TO APPARENT COLONIZATION TIMES OF ISLAND BIOTAS," Evolution 58(8), 1664-1673, (1 August 2004). https://doi.org/10.1554/03-456
Received: 30 July 2003; Accepted: 4 May 2004; Published: 1 August 2004
JOURNAL ARTICLE
10 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

KEYWORDS
colonization
genetic divergence
Hawaiian Islands
migration
speciation
speciation-threshold model
West Indies
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top