4.4 Article

The Genomic Consistency of the Loss of Anadromy in an Arctic Fish (Salvelinus alpinus)

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/719122

Keywords

parallelism; allopatry; landlocked; anadromy; incipient speciation; SNPs

Funding

  1. Institute for Biodiversity, Ecosystem Science, and Sustainability of the Department of Environment and Conservation of the Government of Labrador and Newfoundland
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [STPGP 430198]
  3. Killam Trust
  4. Government of Nova Scotia

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The genetic consequences associated with the loss of migratory capacity of landlocked diadromous fishes in freshwater are not well understood. Selective pressures in freshwater residency can lead to differentiation between landlocked and anadromous populations, as well as within landlocked populations. However, genetic drift in isolated landlocked populations may limit consistent adaptation. Understanding the genetic parallelism can have implications for evolution and management practices.
The potentially significant genetic consequences associated with the loss of migratory capacity of diadromous fishes that have become landlocked in freshwater are poorly understood. Consistent selective pressures associated with freshwater residency may drive repeated differentiation both between allopatric landlocked and anadromous populations and within landlocked populations (resulting in sympatric morphs). Alternatively, the strong genetic drift anticipated in isolated landlocked populations could hinder consistent adaptation, limiting genetic parallelism. Understanding the degree of genetic parallelism underlying differentiation has implications for both the predictability of evolution and management practices. We employed an 87k single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array to examine the genetic characteristics of landlocked and anadromous Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) populations from five drainages within Labrador, Canada. One gene was detected as an outlier between sympatric, size-differentiated morphs in each of two landlocked lakes. While no single locus differentiated all replicate pairs of landlocked and anadromous populations, several SNPs, genes, and paralogs were consistently detected as outliers in at least 70% of these pairwise comparisons. A significant C-score suggested that the amount of shared outlier SNPs across all paired landlocked and anadromous populations was greater than expected by chance. Our results indicate that despite their isolation, selection due to the loss of diadromy may drive consistent genetic responses in landlocked populations.

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