Data from: Selfing ability and drift load evolve with range expansion

Description

Colonization at expanding range edges often involves few founders, reducing effective population size. This process can promote the evolution of self-fertilization, but implicating historical processes as drivers of trait evolution is often difficult and requires an explicit model of biogeographic history. In plants, contemporary limits to outcrossing are often invoked as evolutionary drivers of self-fertilization, but historical expansions may shape mating system diversity, with leading-edge populations evolving elevated selfing ability. In a widespread plant, Campanula americana, we identified a glacial refugium in the southern Appalachian Mountains from spatial patterns of genetic drift among 24 populations. Populations farther from this refugium have smaller effective sizes and fewer rare alleles. They also displayed elevated heterosis in among-population crosses, reflecting the accumulation of deleterious mutations during range expansion. While populations with elevated heterosis had reduced segregating mutation load, the magnitude of inbreeding depression lacked geographic pattern. The ability to self-fertilize was strongly positively correlated with the distance from the refugium and mutation accumulation—a pattern that contrasts sharply with contemporary mate and pollinator limitation. In this and other species, diversity in sexual systems may reflect the legacy of evolution in small, colonizing populations, with little or no relation to the ecology of modern populations.,Phenotypic data for f inbreeding depression and drift loadPopulation attributes and phenotypic data used to calculate stage-specific and cumulative inbreeding depression and drift load for 24 populations of Campanula americana. Column header descriptions are provided in the 'column header descriptions' tab.Koskietal_EvoLett_PhenotypicData_DriftLoad_InbreedingDepression.xlsxipyrad paramsParameter file associated with our processing of RADseq data in ipyradbellmergeAfter processing reads in ipyrad, the resulting data are stored in the variant call format (VCF) in bellmerge.vcf. These data can be analyzed with 3 R scripts to generate results presented in the paper.diversity R scriptExtracts estimates of the population mutation parameter and Tajima's Ddiversity.Rinbreeding coefficient R scriptCalculates observed and expected heterozygosity from genotypic data and the inbreeding coefficient of populations.inbreeding coefficient.RTDoA R scriptCalculates directionality statistics and identifies the geographic location of a recent range expansion. To properly run this file, one must set a filepath containing the files in the TDoA dependencies folder.TDoA.RREADME

Publication Date

1-1-2020

Publisher

DRYAD

DOI

10.5061/dryad.p6k0mq3

Funder

National Science Foundation

Language

en

Document Type

Data Set

Identifier

10.5061/dryad.p6k0mq3

Embargo Date

1-1-2020

Version

1

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