Whittaker Kerry A, Rynearson Tatiana A
Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI 02882.
Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI 02882
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Mar 7;114(10):2651-2656. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1612346114. Epub 2017 Feb 16.
The ability for organisms to disperse throughout their environment is thought to strongly influence population structure and thus evolution of diversity within species. A decades-long debate surrounds processes that generate and support high microbial diversity, particularly in the ocean. The debate concerns whether diversification occurs primarily through geographic partitioning (where distance limits gene flow) or through environmental selection, and remains unresolved due to lack of empirical data. Here we show that gene flow in a diatom, an ecologically important eukaryotic microbe, is not limited by global-scale geographic distance. Instead, environmental and ecological selection likely play a more significant role than dispersal in generating and maintaining diversity. We detected significantly diverged populations ( > 0.130) and discovered temporal genetic variability at a single site that was on par with spatial genetic variability observed over distances of 15,000 km. Relatedness among populations was decoupled from geographic distance across the global ocean and instead, correlated significantly with water temperature and whole-community chlorophyll Correlations with temperature point to the importance of environmental selection in structuring populations. Correlations with whole-community chlorophyll , a proxy for autotrophic biomass, suggest that ecological selection via interactions with other plankton may generate and maintain population genetic structure in marine microbes despite global-scale dispersal. Here, we provide empirical evidence for global gene flow in a marine eukaryotic microbe, suggesting that everything holds the potential to be everywhere, with environmental and ecological selection rather than geography or dispersal dictating the structure and evolution of diversity over space and time.
生物体在其整个环境中扩散的能力被认为对种群结构有强烈影响,进而影响物种内多样性的进化。围绕产生和维持高微生物多样性的过程,存在长达数十年的争论,特别是在海洋中。争论的焦点在于多样化主要是通过地理分隔(距离限制基因流动)还是通过环境选择发生,由于缺乏实证数据,该争论仍未得到解决。在这里,我们表明,硅藻(一种具有重要生态意义的真核微生物)中的基因流动不受全球尺度地理距离的限制。相反,在产生和维持多样性方面,环境和生态选择可能比扩散发挥更重要的作用。我们检测到显著分化的种群(>0.130),并在单个地点发现了与在15000公里距离上观察到的空间遗传变异相当的时间遗传变异。全球海洋中种群之间的亲缘关系与地理距离脱钩,相反,与水温以及全群落叶绿素显著相关。与温度的相关性表明环境选择在构建种群结构中的重要性。与全群落叶绿素(自养生物量的替代指标)的相关性表明,尽管存在全球尺度的扩散,但通过与其他浮游生物的相互作用进行的生态选择可能在海洋微生物中产生并维持种群遗传结构。在这里,我们为海洋真核微生物中的全球基因流动提供了实证证据,表明一切都有可能无处不在,环境和生态选择而非地理或扩散决定了多样性在空间和时间上的结构和进化。