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1 April 2000 GENETIC AND PHYLOGENETIC CONSEQUENCES OF ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Kevin P. Johnson, Frederick R. Adler, Joshua L. Cherry
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Abstract

Island biogeography theory predicts that the number of species on an island should increase with island size and decrease with island distance to the mainland. These predictions are generally well supported in comparative and experimental studies. These ecological, equilibrium predictions arise as a result of colonization and extinction processes. Because colonization and extinction are also important processes in evolution, we develop methods to test evolutionary predictions of island biogeography. We derive a population genetic model of island biogeography that incorporates island colonization, migration of individuals from the mainland, and extinction of island populations. The model provides a means of estimating the rates of migration and extinction from population genetic data. This model predicts that within an island population the distribution of genetic divergences with respect to the mainland source population should be bimodal, with much of the divergence dating to the colonization event. Across islands, this model predicts that populations on large islands should be on average more genetically divergent from mainland source populations than those on small islands. Likewise, populations on distant islands should be more divergent than those on close islands. Published observations of a larger proportion of endemic species on large and distant islands support these predictions.

Corresponding Editor: C. Boggs

Kevin P. Johnson, Frederick R. Adler, and Joshua L. Cherry "GENETIC AND PHYLOGENETIC CONSEQUENCES OF ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY," Evolution 54(2), 387-396, (1 April 2000). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2000)054[0387:GAPCOI]2.0.CO;2
Received: 12 February 1999; Accepted: 1 August 1999; Published: 1 April 2000
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KEYWORDS
extinction
genetic divergence
island isolation
migration
speciation
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