Post-glacial recolonization and multiple scales of secondary contact contribute to contemporary Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) genomic variation in North America

IF 3.4 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Journal of Biogeography Pub Date : 2024-04-24 DOI:10.1111/jbi.14852
Cameron M. Nugent, Tony Kess, Barbara L. Langille, Samantha V. Beck, Steven Duffy, Amber Messmer, Nicole Smith, Sarah J. Lehnert, Brendan F. Wringe, Matthew Kent, Paul Bentzen, Ian R. Bradbury
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Abstract

Aim

In northern environments, periods of isolation during Pleistocene glaciations and subsequent recolonization and secondary contact have had a significant influence on contemporary diversity of many species. The recent advent of high-resolution genomic analyses allows unprecedented power to resolve genomic signatures of such events in northern species. Here, we provide the highest resolution genomic characterization of Atlantic salmon in North America to date to infer glacial refugia and the geographic scales of post-glacial secondary contact.

Location

North America.

Taxon

Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar.

Methods

Samples were collected for 5455 individuals from 148 populations, encompassing the majority of the Atlantic salmon's native range in North America, from Labrador to Maine. Individuals were genotyped using a 220K single nucleotide polymorphism array aligned to the Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) genome. Spatial genetic structure (principal component analysis, k-means clustering, admixture) was evaluated in conjunction with genomic comparisons of these identified lineages to infer the refugia during the last glacial maximum and regions of secondary contact following recolonization.

Results

Spatial genomic analyses identified three phylogeographic groups, consistent with the northward recolonization from two southern glacial refugia in North America (a western Maritime lineage and an eastern Newfoundland and Labrador lineage), with subsequent differentiation of the eastern lineage into two separate groups. Secondary contact among these North American groups was observed within the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence, and evidence of trans-Atlantic secondary contact was detected within the eastern Newfoundland and Labrador lineage. Comparison of groups from insular Newfoundland with those from mainland Labrador suggests genomic regions displaying high differentiation were characterized by elevated European admixture, suggesting a possible role of European secondary contact in population divergence.

Main Conclusions

These findings present the first evidence suggesting that genomic diversity in extant North American Atlantic salmon populations has resulted from allopatric isolation in two glacial refugia followed by both regional and trans-Atlantic recolonization and secondary contact and demonstrate the power of genomic tools to resolve historical drivers of diversity in wild populations.

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冰川期后的重新定居和多种规模的二次接触导致了北美当代大西洋鲑(Salmo salar)基因组的变异
在北方环境中,更新世冰川时期的隔离以及随后的重新定居和二次接触对许多物种的当代多样性产生了重大影响。最近出现的高分辨率基因组分析使我们能够以前所未有的能力解析北方物种中此类事件的基因组特征。我们从 148 个种群中收集了 5455 个个体的样本,涵盖了大西洋鲑在北美从拉布拉多到缅因州的大部分原生地。使用与大西洋鲑基因组对齐的 220K 单核苷酸多态性阵列对个体进行基因分型。空间遗传结构(主成分分析、k-means 聚类、掺杂)与这些已确定品系的基因组比较相结合进行了评估,以推断末次冰川极盛时期的避难所和重新定居后的二次接触区域。空间基因组分析确定了三个系统地理群,与从北美洲两个南部冰川避难所向北重新定居的情况一致(一个西部滨海系和一个东部纽芬兰和拉布拉多系),东部系随后分化为两个独立的群。在圣劳伦斯湾北部观察到这些北美类群之间的二次接触,在纽芬兰和拉布拉多东部类群中发现了跨大西洋二次接触的证据。这些研究结果首次提出证据表明,现存北美大西洋鲑鱼种群的基因组多样性是在两个冰川避难所中异地隔离后,经过区域和跨大西洋再殖民及二次接触而形成的,并证明了基因组工具在解决野生种群多样性的历史驱动因素方面的威力。
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来源期刊
Journal of Biogeography
Journal of Biogeography 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
5.10%
发文量
203
审稿时长
2.2 months
期刊介绍: Papers dealing with all aspects of spatial, ecological and historical biogeography are considered for publication in Journal of Biogeography. The mission of the journal is to contribute to the growth and societal relevance of the discipline of biogeography through its role in the dissemination of biogeographical research.
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