Landscape genetics across the Andes mountains: Environmental variation
drives genetic divergence in the leaf-cutting ant Atta cephalotes
Abstract
Distinguishing among the mechanisms underlying the spatial distribution
of genetic variation resulting from the environmental or physical
barriers from those arising due to simple geographic distance is
challenging in complex landscapes. The Andean uplift represents one of
the most heterogeneous habitats where these questions remain unexplored
since multiple mechanisms may interact, confounding their relative
roles. We explore this broad question in the leaf-cutting ant Atta
cephalotes, a species that is distributed across the Andes mountains,
using nuclear microsatellite markers and mtCOI gene sequences. We
investigate spatial genetic divergence across the western range of the
northern Andes in Colombia by testing the relative role of alternative
scenarios of population divergence, including isolation by geographic
distance (IBD), climatic conditions (IBE), and the physical barriers
presented by the Andes mountains (IBB). Our results reveal substantial
genetic differentiation among A. cephalotes populations for both
types of markers, but only nuclear divergence followed a hierarchical
pattern with multiple models of genetic divergence imposed by the
western range. Model selection showed that the IBD, IBE (temperature and
precipitation), and IBB (Andes mountains) models, often proposed as
individual drivers of genetic divergence, interact and explain up to
33% of the genetic divergence in A. cephalotes. The IBE model
remained significant after accounting for IBD, suggesting that
environmental factors play a more prominent role than with IBB. These
factors, in combination with the idiosyncratic dispersal patterns of
ants, appear to determine the hierarchical patterns of gene flow. This
study enriches our understanding of the forces shaping population
divergence in complex habitat landscapes.