Phillips K P, Jorgensen T H, Jolliffe K G, Richardson D S
School of Biological Sciences, Norwich Research Park, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
NERC Biomolecular Analysis Facility (NBAF), Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2017 Nov;30(11):1953-1965. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13152. Epub 2017 Aug 28.
How individual genetic variability relates to fitness is important in understanding evolution and the processes affecting populations of conservation concern. Heterozygosity-fitness correlations (HFCs) have been widely used to study this link in wild populations, where key parameters that affect both variability and fitness, such as inbreeding, can be difficult to measure. We used estimates of parental heterozygosity and genetic similarity ('relatedness') derived from 32 microsatellite markers to explore the relationship between genetic variability and fitness in a population of the critically endangered hawksbill turtle, Eretmochelys imbricata. We found no effect of maternal MLH (multilocus heterozygosity) on clutch size or egg success rate, and no single-locus effects. However, we found effects of paternal MLH and parental relatedness on egg success rate that interacted in a way that may result in both positive and negative effects of genetic variability. Multicollinearity in these tests was within safe limits, and null simulations suggested that the effect was not an artefact of using paternal genotypes reconstructed from large samples of offspring. Our results could imply a tension between inbreeding and outbreeding depression in this system, which is biologically feasible in turtles: female-biased natal philopatry may elevate inbreeding risk and local adaptation, and both processes may be disrupted by male-biased dispersal. Although this conclusion should be treated with caution due to a lack of significant identity disequilibrium, our study shows the importance of considering both positive and negative effects when assessing how variation in genetic variability affects fitness in wild systems.
个体遗传变异性与适应性之间的关系对于理解进化以及影响受保护种群的过程至关重要。杂合度-适应性相关性(HFCs)已被广泛用于研究野生种群中的这种联系,在野生种群中,诸如近亲繁殖等影响变异性和适应性的关键参数可能难以测量。我们利用从32个微卫星标记得出的亲本杂合度和遗传相似性(“亲缘关系”)估计值,来探究极度濒危的玳瑁(Eretmochelys imbricata)种群中遗传变异性与适应性之间的关系。我们发现母体多位点杂合度(MLH)对窝卵数或卵成功率没有影响,也没有单一位点的影响。然而,我们发现父本MLH和亲本亲缘关系对卵成功率有影响,且二者相互作用的方式可能导致遗传变异性产生正负两种效应。这些测试中的多重共线性在安全范围内,并且零模型模拟表明该效应并非使用从大量后代样本重建的父本基因型所导致的假象。我们的结果可能意味着在这个系统中近亲繁殖和远交衰退之间存在一种张力,这在海龟中从生物学角度来看是可行的:雌性偏向的出生地留居行为可能会增加近亲繁殖风险和局部适应性,而这两个过程都可能因雄性偏向的扩散而受到干扰。尽管由于缺乏显著的同一性不平衡,这一结论应谨慎对待,但我们的研究表明,在评估遗传变异性的变化如何影响野生系统中的适应性时,考虑正负两种效应非常重要。