Department of Zoology, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
Department of Marine Science, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
Proc Biol Sci. 2020 Jul 8;287(1930):20200712. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.0712.
Theory suggests that catastrophic earth-history events can drive rapid biological evolution, but empirical evidence for such processes is scarce. Destructive geological events such as earthquakes can represent large-scale natural experiments for inferring such evolutionary processes. We capitalized on a major prehistoric (800 yr BP) geological uplift event affecting a southern New Zealand coastline to test for the lasting genomic impacts of disturbance. Genome-wide analyses of three co-distributed keystone kelp taxa revealed that post-earthquake recolonization drove the evolution of novel, large-scale intertidal spatial genetic 'sectors' which are tightly linked to geological fault boundaries. Demographic simulations confirmed that, following widespread extirpation, parallel expansions into newly vacant habitats rapidly restructured genome-wide diversity. Interspecific differences in recolonization mode and tempo reflect differing ecological constraints relating to habitat choice and dispersal capacity among taxa. This study highlights the rapid and enduring evolutionary effects of catastrophic ecosystem disturbance and reveals the key role of range expansion in reshaping spatial genetic patterns.
理论表明,灾难性的地球历史事件可以推动生物的快速进化,但此类过程的经验证据很少。地震等破坏性地质事件可以代表推断此类进化过程的大规模自然实验。我们利用影响新西兰南部海岸线的一次重大史前(800 年前)地质隆起事件,检验了干扰对基因组的持久影响。对三个共生的造礁石珊瑚分类群的全基因组分析表明,地震后的再定居驱动了新型大规模潮间带空间遗传“扇区”的进化,这些扇区与地质断层边界紧密相关。种群动态模拟证实,在广泛灭绝之后,平行扩展到新的空缺栖息地会迅速重构全基因组的多样性。再定居模式和速度的种间差异反映了与物种间栖息地选择和扩散能力相关的不同生态限制。本研究强调了灾难性生态干扰的快速和持久的进化效应,并揭示了范围扩展在重塑空间遗传模式方面的关键作用。