Dane Maison, Anderson Nicholas John, Osburn Christopher L, Colbourne John K, Frisch Dagmar
School of Biosciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK.
Department of Geography Loughborough University Loughborough UK.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Nov 20;10(24):14178-14188. doi: 10.1002/ece3.7012. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Climate and environmental condition drive biodiversity at many levels of biological organization, from populations to ecosystems. Combined with paleoecological reconstructions, palaeogenetic information on resident populations provides novel insights into evolutionary trajectories and genetic diversity driven by environmental variability. While temporal observations of changing genetic structure are often made of sexual populations, little is known about how environmental change affects the long-term fate of asexual lineages. Here, we provide information on obligately asexual, triploid populations from three Arctic lakes in West Greenland through the past 200-300 years to test the impact of environmental change on the temporal and spatial population genetic structure. The contrasting ecological state of the lakes, specifically regarding salinity and habitat structure may explain the observed lake-specific clonal composition over time. Palaeolimnological reconstructions show considerable regional environmental fluctuations since 1,700 (the end of the Little Ice Age), but the population genetic structure in two lakes was almost unchanged with at most two clones per time period. Their local populations were strongly dominated by a single clone that has persisted for 250-300 years. We discuss possible explanations for the apparent population genetic stability: (a) persistent clones are general-purpose genotypes that thrive under broad environmental conditions, (b) clonal lineages evolved subtle genotypic differences unresolved by microsatellite markers, or (c) epigenetic modifications allow for clonal adaptation to changing environmental conditions. Our results motivate research into the mechanisms of adaptation in these populations, as well as their evolutionary fate in the light of accelerating climate change in the polar regions.
气候和环境条件在从种群到生态系统的多个生物组织层次上驱动着生物多样性。结合古生态重建,关于当地种群的古遗传学信息为环境变异驱动的进化轨迹和遗传多样性提供了新的见解。虽然对有性种群不断变化的遗传结构的时间观察经常进行,但对于环境变化如何影响无性谱系的长期命运却知之甚少。在这里,我们提供了过去200 - 300年来自西格陵兰三个北极湖泊的专性无性三倍体种群的信息,以测试环境变化对时间和空间种群遗传结构的影响。湖泊不同的生态状态,特别是在盐度和栖息地结构方面,可能解释了随时间观察到的特定湖泊克隆组成。古湖沼学重建显示自1700年(小冰期末期)以来该地区环境有相当大的波动,但两个湖泊的种群遗传结构几乎没有变化,每个时间段最多有两个克隆。它们的当地种群强烈地由一个持续了250 - 300年的单一克隆主导。我们讨论了这种明显的种群遗传稳定性的可能解释:(a) 持续存在的克隆是在广泛环境条件下茁壮成长的通用基因型,(b) 克隆谱系进化出了微卫星标记无法分辨的细微基因型差异,或者 (c) 表观遗传修饰允许克隆适应不断变化的环境条件。我们的结果促使人们研究这些种群的适应机制,以及鉴于极地地区加速的气候变化它们的进化命运。