Founding events in species invasions: genetic variation, adaptive evolution, and the role of multiple introductions
University of California, Santa Cruz
Abstract
Invasive species are predicted to suffer from reductions in genetic diversity during founding events, reducing adaptive potential. Integrating evidence from two literature reviews and two case studies, we address the following questions: How much genetic diversity is lost in invasions? Do multiple introductions ameliorate this loss? Is there evidence for loss of diversity in quantitative traits? Do invaders that have experienced strong bottlenecks show adaptive evolution? How do multiple introductions influence adaptation on a landscape scale? We reviewed studies of 80 species of animals, plants, and fungi that quantified nuclear molecular diversity within introduced and source populations. Overall, there were…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 189
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Genetic diversity
- Maladaptation
- Species richness
- Evolutionary biology
- Genetic variation
- Adaptation (eye)
- Ecology
- Life in Land