4.7 Article

Microgeographical adaptation corresponds to elevational distributions of congeneric montane grasshoppers

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 481-498

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15739

Keywords

contemporary evolution; insects; Kosciuscola; landscape genomics; local adaptation; natural selection

Funding

  1. Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment
  2. Macquarie University
  3. Orthopterists' Society
  4. Linnean Society of NSW

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Local adaptation can occur at small spatial scales relative to the dispersal capacity of species. Using grasshopper species endemic to the Australian Alps as a case study, this research found that species with different elevational niche breadths exhibit differences in microgeographical adaptation patterns. The more narrowly distributed species showed stronger genetic structure and selection features, with parallel adaptive processes in response to elevation, demonstrating the effects of fine-scale shifts in species' niche breadth on adaptive genetic processes.
Local adaptation can occur at small spatial scales relative to the dispersal capacity of species. Alpine ecosystems have sharp environmental clines that offer an opportunity to investigate the effects of fine-scale shifts in species' niche breadth on adaptive genetic processes. Here we examine two grasshopper species endemic to the Australian Alps (Kosciuscola spp.) that differ in elevational niche breadth: one broader, K. usitatus (1400-2200 m), and one narrower, K. tristis (1600-2000 m). We examine signatures of selection with respect to environmental and morphological variables in two mountain regions using F-ST outlier tests and environmental association analyses (EAAs) applied to single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data (K. usitatus: 9017 SNPs, n = 130; K. tristis: 7363 SNPs, n = 135). Stronger genetic structure was found in the more narrowly distributed K. tristis, which showed almost twice the number of SNPs under putative selection (10.8%) compared with K. usitatus (5.3%). When examining SNPs in common across species (n = 3058), 260 SNPs (8.5%) were outliers shared across species, and these were mostly associated with elevation, a proxy for temperature, suggesting parallel adaptive processes in response to climatic drivers. Additive polygenic scores (an estimate of the cumulative signal of selection across all candidate loci) were nonlinearly and positively correlated with elevation in both species. However, a steeper correlation in K. tristis indicated a stronger signal of spatially varying selection towards higher elevations. Our study illustrates that the niche breadth of co-occurring and related species distributed along the same environmental cline is associated with differences in patterns of microgeographical adaptation.

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