DeCandia Alexandra L, Brzeski Kristin E, Heppenheimer Elizabeth, Caro Catherine V, Camenisch Glauco, Wandeler Peter, Driscoll Carlos, vonHoldt Bridgett M
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton New Jersey.
School of Forest Resources and Environmental Science Michigan Technological University Houghton Michigan.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Jan 31;9(4):2046-2060. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4898. eCollection 2019 Feb.
Urbanization is driving environmental change on a global scale, creating novel environments for wildlife to colonize. Through a combination of stochastic and selective processes, urbanization is also driving evolutionary change. For instance, difficulty in traversing human-modified landscapes may isolate newly established populations from rural sources, while novel selective pressures, such as altered disease risk, toxicant exposure, and light pollution, may further diverge populations through local adaptation. Assessing the evolutionary consequences of urban colonization and the processes underlying them is a principle aim of urban evolutionary ecology. In the present study, we revisited the genetic effects of urbanization on red foxes () that colonized Zurich, Switzerland. Through use of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms and microsatellite markers linked to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), we expanded upon a previous neutral microsatellite study to assess population structure, characterize patterns of genetic diversity, and detect outliers associated with urbanization. Our results indicated the presence of one large evolutionary cluster, with substructure evident between geographic sampling areas. In urban foxes, we observed patterns of neutral and functional diversity consistent with founder events and reported increased differentiation between populations separated by natural and anthropogenic barriers. We additionally reported evidence of selection acting on MHC-linked markers and identified outlier loci with putative gene functions related to energy metabolism, behavior, and immunity. We concluded that demographic processes primarily drove patterns of diversity, with outlier tests providing preliminary evidence of possible urban adaptation. This study contributes to our overall understanding of urban colonization ecology and emphasizes the value of combining datasets when examining evolutionary change in an increasingly urban world.
城市化正在全球范围内推动环境变化,为野生动物创造新的栖息地。通过随机过程和选择过程的结合,城市化也在推动进化变化。例如,穿越人类改造景观的困难可能会使新建立的种群与农村种群隔离,而新的选择压力,如疾病风险改变、接触有毒物质和光污染,可能会通过局部适应使种群进一步分化。评估城市殖民化的进化后果及其背后的过程是城市进化生态学的主要目标。在本研究中,我们重新审视了城市化对定居在瑞士苏黎世的赤狐()的遗传影响。通过使用全基因组单核苷酸多态性和与主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)相关的微卫星标记,我们在之前的中性微卫星研究基础上进行了扩展,以评估种群结构、描述遗传多样性模式,并检测与城市化相关的异常值。我们的结果表明存在一个大的进化簇,地理采样区域之间存在明显的亚结构。在城市狐狸中,我们观察到与奠基者事件一致的中性和功能多样性模式,并报告了被自然和人为屏障分隔的种群之间的分化增加。我们还报告了选择作用于与MHC相关标记的证据,并确定了具有与能量代谢、行为和免疫相关推定基因功能的异常位点。我们得出结论,人口统计学过程主要驱动了多样性模式,异常值测试提供了可能的城市适应的初步证据。这项研究有助于我们对城市殖民化生态学的整体理解,并强调在研究日益城市化的世界中的进化变化时结合数据集的价值。