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Using gridCoal to assess whether standard population genetic theory holds in the presence of spatio-temporal heterogeneity in population size.
  • Barbora Trubenova,
  • Enikő Szép,
  • Katalin Csillery
Barbora Trubenova
ETH Zürich

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Enikő Szép
IST Austria
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Katalin Csillery
WSL
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Abstract

Spatially explicit population genetic models have long been developed, yet have rarely been used to test hypotheses about the spatial distribution of genetic diversity or the expected neutral levels of genetic divergence between populations. Here, we use spatially explicit coalescence simulations to explore the properties of the island model and the two-dimensional stepping stone model under a wide range of scenarios with spatio-temporal variation in deme size. We avoid the simulation of genetic data, using the fact that under the studied models, summary statistics of genetic diversity and divergence between demes can be approximated from coalescence times. We perform the simulations using gridCoal, a flexible spatial wrapper for the software msprime developed herein. In gridCoal, deme sizes can change arbitrarily across space and time, and migration rates between individual demes can be specified. We identify the different factors that can cause a deviation from the theoretical expectations, such as the simulation time in comparison to the effective deme size and the spatio-temporal autocorrelation across the grid. Our results highlight that Fst, a measure of the strength of population structure, principally depends on recent demography, which makes it robust to temporal variation in deme size. We also warn that predicting genetic diversity from coalescence times requires a much longer run time than needed for the estimation of Fst. Finally, we illustrate the use of gridCoal on a real-world example, the range expansion of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) since the Last Glacial Maximum, using different degrees of spatio-temporal variation in deme size.
18 Feb 2022Submitted to Molecular Ecology Resources
24 Feb 2022Reviewer(s) Assigned
04 Apr 2022Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
03 May 2022Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
02 Jun 2022Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
02 Jun 20221st Revision Received
16 Jun 2022Editorial Decision: Accept