Seascape genomics reveals population isolation in the reef-building honeycomb worm, Sabellaria alveolata (L.).

IF 3.4 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences BMC Evolutionary Biology Pub Date : 2020-08-10 DOI:10.1186/s12862-020-01658-9
Anna P Muir, Stanislas F Dubois, Rebecca E Ross, Louise B Firth, Antony M Knights, Fernando P Lima, Rui Seabra, Erwan Corre, Gildas Le Corguillé, Flavia L D Nunes
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Abstract

Background: Under the threat of climate change populations can disperse, acclimatise or evolve in order to avoid fitness loss. In light of this, it is important to understand neutral gene flow patterns as a measure of dispersal potential, but also adaptive genetic variation as a measure of evolutionary potential. In order to assess genetic variation and how this relates to environment in the honeycomb worm (Sabellaria alveolata (L.)), a reef-building polychaete that supports high biodiversity, we carried out RAD sequencing using individuals from along its complete latitudinal range. Patterns of neutral population genetic structure were compared to larval dispersal as predicted by ocean circulation modelling, and outlier analyses and genotype-environment association tests were used to attempt to identify loci under selection in relation to local temperature data.

Results: We genotyped 482 filtered SNPs, from 68 individuals across nine sites, 27 of which were identified as outliers using BAYESCAN and ARLEQUIN. All outlier loci were potentially under balancing selection, despite previous evidence of local adaptation in the system. Limited gene flow was observed among reef-sites (FST = 0.28 ± 0.10), in line with the low dispersal potential identified by the larval dispersal models. The North Atlantic reef emerged as a distinct population and this was linked to high local larval retention and the effect of the North Atlantic Current on dispersal.

Conclusions: As an isolated population, with limited potential for natural genetic or demographic augmentation from other reefs, the North Atlantic site warrants conservation attention in order to preserve not only this species, but above all the crucial functional ecological roles that are associated with their bioconstructions. Our study highlights the utility of using seascape genomics to identify populations of conservation concern.

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海景基因组学揭示了造礁蜂巢蠕虫(Sabellaria alveolata (L.))的种群隔离。
背景:在气候变化的威胁下,种群可以分散、适应或进化,以避免健康损失。有鉴于此,不仅要了解衡量扩散潜力的中性基因流模式,还要了解衡量进化潜力的适应性遗传变异。为了评估蜂巢蠕虫(Sabellaria alveolata (L.))的遗传变异及其与环境的关系,我们对其整个纬度范围内的个体进行了 RAD 测序。我们将中性种群遗传结构模式与海洋环流建模预测的幼虫散布模式进行了比较,并使用离群值分析和基因型与环境关联检验来尝试确定与当地温度数据相关的选择位点:我们对来自 9 个地点 68 个个体的 482 个筛选 SNP 进行了基因分型,其中 27 个 SNP 被 BAYESCAN 和 ARLEQUIN 鉴定为离群位点。尽管之前有证据表明该系统具有局部适应性,但所有离群位点都可能处于平衡选择之下。在珊瑚礁地点之间观察到的基因流动有限(FST = 0.28 ± 0.10),这与幼虫扩散模型确定的低扩散潜力相一致。北大西洋珊瑚礁作为一个独特的种群出现,这与当地幼体滞留率高以及北大西洋洋流对扩散的影响有关:作为一个与世隔绝的种群,从其他珊瑚礁获得自然遗传或人口增殖的潜力有限,北大西洋珊瑚礁需要受到保护,不仅要保护该物种,更重要的是要保护与其生物构造相关的重要生态功能。我们的研究凸显了利用海景基因组学来识别受保护种群的实用性。
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来源期刊
BMC Evolutionary Biology
BMC Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Evolutionary Biology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of molecular and non-molecular evolution of all organisms, as well as phylogenetics and palaeontology.
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