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      Isolation by resistance.

      1
      Evolution; international journal of organic evolution

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          Abstract

          Despite growing interest in the effects of landscape heterogeneity on genetic structuring, few tools are available to incorporate data on landscape composition into population genetic studies. Analyses of isolation by distance have typically either assumed spatial homogeneity for convenience or applied theoretically unjustified distance metrics to compensate for heterogeneity. Here I propose the isolation-by-resistance (IBR) model as an alternative for predicting equilibrium genetic structuring in complex landscapes. The model predicts a positive relationship between genetic differentiation and the resistance distance, a distance metric that exploits precise relationships between random walk times and effective resistances in electronic networks. As a predictor of genetic differentiation, the resistance distance is both more theoretically justified and more robust to spatial heterogeneity than Euclidean or least cost path-based distance measures. Moreover, the metric can be applied with a wide range of data inputs, including coarse-scale range maps, simple maps of habitat and nonhabitat within a species' range, or complex spatial datasets with habitats and barriers of differing qualities. The IBR model thus provides a flexible and efficient tool to account for habitat heterogeneity in studies of isolation by distance, improve understanding of how landscape characteristics affect genetic structuring, and predict genetic and evolutionary consequences of landscape change.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Evolution
          Evolution; international journal of organic evolution
          0014-3820
          0014-3820
          Aug 2006
          : 60
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93101-5504, USA. mcrae@nceas.ucsb.edu
          Article
          10.1554/05-321.1
          17017056
          8661969e-78fe-4e68-bc7d-40db6f30c1cd
          History

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