School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, Seattle, WA 98195-5020, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2011 Feb 18;11:48. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-48.
Disentangling the roles of geography and ecology driving population divergence and distinguishing adaptive from neutral evolution at the molecular level have been common goals among evolutionary and conservation biologists. Using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) multilocus genotypes for 31 sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) populations from the Kvichak River, Alaska, we assessed the relative roles of geography (discrete boundaries or continuous distance) and ecology (spawning habitat and timing) driving genetic divergence in this species at varying spatial scales within the drainage. We also evaluated two outlier detection methods to characterize candidate SNPs responding to environmental selection, emphasizing which mechanism(s) may maintain the genetic variation of outlier loci.
For the entire drainage, Mantel tests suggested a greater role of geographic distance on population divergence than differences in spawn timing when each variable was correlated with pairwise genetic distances. Clustering and hierarchical analyses of molecular variance indicated that the largest genetic differentiation occurred between populations from distinct lakes or subdrainages. Within one population-rich lake, however, Mantel tests suggested a greater role of spawn timing than geographic distance on population divergence when each variable was correlated with pairwise genetic distances. Variable spawn timing among populations was linked to specific spawning habitats as revealed by principal coordinate analyses. We additionally identified two outlier SNPs located in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II that appeared robust to violations of demographic assumptions from an initial pool of eight candidates for selection.
First, our results suggest that geography and ecology have influenced genetic divergence between Alaskan sockeye salmon populations in a hierarchical manner depending on the spatial scale. Second, we found consistent evidence for diversifying selection in two loci located in the MHC class II by means of outlier detection methods; yet, alternative scenarios for the evolution of these loci were also evaluated. Both conclusions argue that historical contingency and contemporary adaptation have likely driven differentiation between Kvichak River sockeye salmon populations, as revealed by a suite of SNPs. Our findings highlight the need for conservation of complex population structure, because it provides resilience in the face of environmental change, both natural and anthropogenic.
在分子水平上,解开地理和生态对种群分歧的作用,区分适应性进化和中性进化,一直是进化和保护生物学家的共同目标。本研究利用来自阿拉斯加 Kvichak 河流域的 31 个红大麻哈鱼(Oncorhynchus nerka)种群的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)多位点基因型,评估了在该流域内不同空间尺度上,地理(离散边界或连续距离)和生态(产卵栖息地和时间)对该物种遗传分化的相对作用。我们还评估了两种异常值检测方法,以描述响应环境选择的候选 SNP,强调哪种机制可能维持异常值位点的遗传变异。
对于整个流域,当每个变量与成对遗传距离相关时,Mantel 检验表明地理距离对种群分歧的作用大于产卵时间的差异。分子方差聚类和层次分析表明,最大的遗传分化发生在来自不同湖泊或亚流域的种群之间。然而,在一个富鱼的湖泊内,当每个变量与成对遗传距离相关时,Mantel 检验表明产卵时间对种群分歧的作用大于地理距离。种群之间可变的产卵时间与特定的产卵栖息地有关,这一点通过主坐标分析揭示出来。我们还确定了两个位于主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)II 类的异常值 SNP,这些 SNP 似乎对初始选择候选者 8 个中的 2 个违反人口假设的情况具有稳健性。
首先,我们的结果表明,地理和生态以层次方式影响了阿拉斯加红大麻哈鱼种群之间的遗传分化,这取决于空间尺度。其次,我们通过异常值检测方法发现了位于 MHC II 类的两个位点的多样化选择的一致证据;然而,也评估了这些位点进化的替代情景。这两个结论都表明,历史偶然性和当代适应性可能导致了 Kvichak 河红大麻哈鱼种群的分化,这一点由一系列 SNP 揭示出来。我们的研究结果强调了保护复杂种群结构的必要性,因为它为面对自然和人为的环境变化提供了弹性。