Does the Colonizing Population Exhibit a Reduced Genetic Diversity and Allele Surfing? A Case Study of the Midday Gerbil (Meriones meridianus Pallas) Expanding Its Range
Olga N. Batova, Nikolay I. Markov, Sergey V. Titov, Andrey V. Tchabovsky

TL;DR
This study examines how genetic diversity and allele surfing occur in a gerbil population expanding into new areas due to desertification in Russia.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence of allele surfing in a natural population during range expansion.
Findings
Colonizing populations show reduced genetic diversity compared to core populations.
Rare alleles increase in frequency in colonizing populations, indicating allele surfing.
Marginal populations exhibit strong genetic differentiation and structuration.
Abstract
We live in a changing world, and human-induced landscape changes cause shifts and expansions of ranges of living organisms worldwide. During range expansions, animals and plants invade and colonize new areas, which may have dramatic ecological and evolutionary consequences. We studied the genetic consequences of range expansion in the desert rodent, currently colonizing new areas in Kalmykia (Southern Russia) following the desertification of rangelands. We found that genetic diversity in the colonizing population was lower than in the range core. Moreover, the colonizing population exhibited strong spatial structuration and increased frequencies of genetic variants (alleles) rare in the source population—signatures of allele surfing, a phenomenon theoretically predicted but, so far, rarely observed in natural populations. Our findings provide new insights into understanding the genetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic diversity and population structure · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation · Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
