Does gene flow limit adaptation at the edge of geographic ranges? A
study of genetic structure, ecophysiological variation, and range limits
within and among sky-island populations of a North American salamander
Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms that constrain or promote the evolution of
species’ geographic ranges has emerged as a fundamental question at the
intersection of evolution, ecology, and conservation. A long-held,
empirically understudied idea is that asymmetrical gene flow from a more
densely populated range center may restrict species’ geographic ranges
by preventing local adaptation and the expansion of populations at the
range edge. In this study, we use ecophysiology, population genetics,
and niche modeling to evaluate whether asymmetrical gene flow from the
range center toward the range edge swamps out physiological
differentiation in peripheral populations preventing local adaptation.
Our focal species, the plethodontid salamander Plethodon ouachitae, is
isolated among six mountaintops (sky islands) in the Interior Highlands
of the United States that differ in climate across mountaintop isolates
and along elevational gradients within mountains. Within mountaintop
isolates we found no genetic structure, uniformly high rates of gene
flow, and no evidence of physiological divergence along elevational
gradients. Although population density peaked at mid- to
high-elevations, inferred gene flow was not consistently biased from
high- to low-density sites. We found significant genetic differentiation
among mountains and evidence for divergence in the environmental niche
across mountains separated by low-elevation barriers to dispersal.
Despite variation in climate among mountains and the potential for
adaptive divergence, we found no evidence for differentiation in
ecophysiology among populations isolated on different mountains. Our
findings do not support asymmetric gene flow as a force restricting
local physiological adaptation and expansion at the range edge, although
uniformly high estimated gene flow within mountains could play such a
role. However, a lack of physiological differentiation among sky-island
populations that differ in climate provides additional support for the
idea that gene flow does not limit local adaptation in this species.