Abstract

BackgroundMany species are shifting their ranges in response to global climate change. Range expansions are known to have profound effects on the genetic composition of populations. The evolution of dispersal during range expansion increases invasion speed, provided that a species can adapt sufficiently fast to novel local conditions. Genetic diversity at the expanding range border is however depleted due to iterated founder effects. The surprising ability of colonizing species to adapt to novel conditions while being subjected to genetic bottlenecks is termed ‘the genetic paradox of invasive species’. Mutational processes have been argued to provide an explanation for this paradox. Mutation rates can evolve, under conditions that favor an increased rate of adaptation, by hitchhiking on beneficial mutations through induced linkage disequilibrium. Here we argue that spatial sorting, iterated founder events, and population structure benefit the build-up and maintenance of such linkage disequilibrium. We investigate if the evolution of mutation rates could play a role in explaining the ‘genetic paradox of invasive species’ for a sexually reproducing species colonizing a landscape of gradually changing conditions.ResultsWe use an individual-based model to show the evolutionary increase of mutation rates in sexual populations during range expansion, in coevolution with the dispersal probability. The observed evolution of mutation rate is adaptive and clearly advances invasion speed both through its effect on the evolution of dispersal probability, and the evolution of local adaptation. This also occurs under a variable temperature gradient, and under the assumption of 90% lethal mutations.ConclusionsIn this study we show novel consequences of the particular genetic properties of populations under spatial disequilibrium, i.e. the coevolution of dispersal probability and mutation rate, even in a sexual species and under realistic spatial gradients, resulting in faster invasions. The evolution of mutation rates can therefore be added to the list of possible explanations for the ‘genetic paradox of invasive species’. We conclude that range expansions and the evolution of mutation rates are in a positive feedback loop, with possibly far-reaching ecological consequences concerning invasiveness and the adaptability of species to novel environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Many species are shifting their ranges in response to global climate change

  • The depletion of genetic diversity at Cobben et al BMC Evolutionary Biology (2017) 17:150 the expanding range border due to iterated founder effects [3, 4, 14] could be expected to limit the invasion speed as low genetic diversity will lead to lower rates of local adaptation and thereby delayed population establishment [15, 16]

  • We argue that population structure, and in addition under range expansion, spatial sorting and iterated founder events, benefit the build-up and maintenance of linkage disequilibrium

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Summary

Introduction

Many species are shifting their ranges in response to global climate change. Range expansions are known to have profound effects on the genetic composition of populations. Even deleterious ones, can surf the Cobben et al BMC Evolutionary Biology (2017) 17:150 the expanding range border due to iterated founder effects [3, 4, 14] could be expected to limit the invasion speed as low genetic diversity will lead to lower rates of local adaptation and thereby delayed population establishment [15, 16]. This increases the strength of linkage disequilibrium between the modifier locus and the mutation locus, due to constant recurring events of genetic hitchhiking He showed theoretically that under these conditions, beneficial mutations can play a role in determining the evolutionarily stable mutation rate in sexual populations when environment conditions are constantly changing and costs of lower fidelity replication are low

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