One of the most prominent manifestations of the ongoing climate warming is the retreat of glaciers and ice sheets around the world. Retreating glaciers result in the formation of new ponds and lakes, which are available for colonization. The gradual appearance of these new habitat patches allows us to determine to what extent the composition of asexual Daphnia (water flea) populations is affected by environmental drivers versus dispersal limitation. Here we used a landscape genetics approach to assess the processes structuring the clonal composition of species in the D. pulex species complex that have colonized periglacial habitats created by ice-sheet retreat in western Greenland. We analyzed 61 populations from a young (<50 y) and an old cluster (>150 y) of lakes and ponds. We identified 42 asexual clones that varied widely in spatial distribution. Beta diversity was higher among older than among younger systems. Lineage sorting by the environment explained 14% of the variation in clonal composition whereas the pure effect of geographic distance was very small and statistically insignificant (Radj2 = 0.010, p= 0.085). Dispersal limitation did not seem important, even among young habitat patches. The observation of several tens of clones colonizing the area combined with environmentally-driven clonal composition of populations illustrates that population assembly of asexual species in the arctic is structured by environmental gradients reflecting differences in the ecology of clones.
Sampling locations and environmental data from Jakobshavn Isbræ region of western Greenland
Geographic coordinates (UTM readings), pH, water temperature, altitude, depth, area and distance to ice sheet collected in the field and nutrients (Total nitrogen, Total phosphorus and chlorophyll-a) determined in the laboratory from water samples collected during field sampling.
Geographic location and Environmental data.txt
Clones and their abuandance in the habitat detected
KX024528-KX024565
DNA Sequence data used for species identification were submitted to GenBank® and deposited for Haileselasie et al. (2016) Colonization history and clonal richness of asexual Daphnia in periglacial habitats of contrasting age in West Greenland in Journal of Animal Ecology (doi:10.1111/1365-2656.12513). They are available from the NCBI PopSet database under accession number 1015802155, or in GenBank® under individual accession numbers KX024528-KX024565.
Dryad® Digital Repository
This files includes the R packages we used in our analysis. The input data and names of variables are the same as those used in the main text. ENV= environmental variables, SPACE +spatial distance, HAB=Habitat (pond vs lake) and AGE = represented by distance and dummy variables for old and young
Dryad® Digital Repository-polysat-input-data
Column A rows 1-12780 indicate name of individuals and population they belong to followed by number
referring to population and individual organism's number, respectively. The letter "L" refers to lake habitat and "p" for pond habitat.
Column B contains list of 9 microsatellite markers from Colbourne et al. (2004) Molecular Ecology Notes 4, 485-490) and
column C through F lists number of alleles for each individual organisms at the respective microsatellite markers.
Column G refers to DNA-code used and column H is multi-locus genotype and column I is code of clones used in the main text and supplementary material.