宿主体大小,而不是宿主种群大小,预测全基因组范围内寄生虫的有效种群大小。

IF 3.4 1区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Jorge Doña, Kevin P Johnson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

一个生物的有效种群大小(Ne)通常与种群中的个体总数成正比。在寄生虫中,我们可以预期有效种群大小与宿主种群大小和宿主体型成正比,因为两者都有望增加寄生虫个体的数量。然而,在其他因素中,寄生虫种群有时如此细分,以至于高水平的近亲繁殖可能会扭曲这些预测的关系。本文利用鸽子寄生虫(71种属羽虱)的全基因组序列数据和系统发育比较方法,研究了寄主种群大小和体大小与寄生虫有效种群大小的关系。我们发现寄生虫的有效种群大小在很大程度上与宿主体型有关,而与宿主种群大小无关。这些结果表明,潜在的当地种群大小(种群内或群落内大小)比潜在的寄生虫种群内总数(即寄主个体)更能预测寄生虫的长期有效种群大小。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Host body size, not host population size, predicts genome-wide effective population size of parasites.

Host body size, not host population size, predicts genome-wide effective population size of parasites.

The effective population size (Ne) of an organism is expected to be generally proportional to the total number of individuals in a population. In parasites, we might expect the effective population size to be proportional to host population size and host body size, because both are expected to increase the number of parasite individuals. However, among other factors, parasite populations are sometimes so extremely subdivided that high levels of inbreeding may distort these predicted relationships. Here, we used whole-genome sequence data from dove parasites (71 feather louse species of the genus Columbicola) and phylogenetic comparative methods to study the relationship between parasite effective population size and host population size and body size. We found that parasite effective population size is largely explained by host body size but not host population size. These results suggest the potential local population size (infrapopulation or deme size) is more predictive of the long-term effective population size of parasites than is the total number of potential parasite infrapopulations (i.e., host individuals).

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来源期刊
Evolution Letters
Evolution Letters EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
13.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
35
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolution Letters publishes cutting-edge new research in all areas of Evolutionary Biology. Available exclusively online, and entirely open access, Evolution Letters consists of Letters - original pieces of research which form the bulk of papers - and Comments and Opinion - a forum for highlighting timely new research ideas for the evolutionary community.
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