Department of Aquaculture and Fish Biology, Hólar University College, Sauðárkrókur, Iceland.
Population Genetics Research Group, Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway.
Heredity (Edinb). 2021 Nov;127(5):455-466. doi: 10.1038/s41437-021-00469-y. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
Populations may counteract lasting temperature changes or recurrent extremes through plasticity or adaptation. However, it remains underexplored how outbreeding, either naturally, unintentionally, or facilitated, may modify a local response potential and whether genotype-by-environment interactions or between-trait correlations can restrict this potential. We quantified population differences and outbreeding effects, within-population genetic variation, and plasticity of these, for thermal performance proxy traits using 32 pedigreed wild, domesticated, and wild-domesticated Atlantic salmon families reared under common-garden conditions. Following exposure to ambient cold (11.6 °C) or ~4° and ~8° warmer summer temperatures, populations differed notably for body length and critical thermal maximum (CT) and for thermal plasticity of length, condition, and CT, but not for haematocrit. Line-cross analysis suggested mostly additive and some dominant outbreeding effects on means and solely additive outbreeding effects on plasticity. Heritability was detected for all traits. However, with increasing acclimation temperature, differences in CT between populations and CT heritability diminished, and CT breeding values re-ranked. Furthermore, CT and body size were negatively correlated at the genetic and phenotypic levels, and there was indirect evidence for a positive correlation between growth potential and thermal performance breadth for growth. Thus, population differences (including those between wild and domesticated populations) in thermal performance and plasticity may present a genetic resource in addition to the within-population genetic variance to facilitate, or impede, thermal adaptation. However, unfavourable genotype-by-environment interactions and negative between-trait correlations may generally hamper joint evolution in response to an increase in average temperature and temporary extremes.
种群可能通过可塑性或适应性来对抗持久的温度变化或反复出现的极端情况。然而,人们对以下问题仍知之甚少:自然、非故意或人为促进的远交会如何改变局部响应潜力,以及基因型-环境互作或性状间相关性是否会限制这种潜力。我们利用 32 个亲缘关系明确的野生、驯养和野生驯养大西洋鲑鱼家系,在相同的养殖条件下,量化了种群差异和远交效应、种群内遗传变异以及这些性状的可塑性,这些性状是热性能指标的替代性状。在暴露于环境温度(11.6°C)或升高 4°C 和 8°C 的夏季温度后,种群在体长和最大临界温度(CT)以及体长、体质和 CT 的热可塑性方面存在显著差异,但在血细胞比容方面没有差异。杂种分析表明,远交效应主要为加性,部分为显性,对平均值有影响,对可塑性仅有加性影响。所有性状都检测到了遗传力。然而,随着驯化温度的升高,种群间 CT 差异和 CT 遗传力减小,CT 育种值重新排序。此外,CT 和体型在遗传和表型水平上呈负相关,并且有间接证据表明生长潜力和生长的热性能宽度之间存在正相关。因此,除了种群内遗传方差外,热性能和可塑性的种群差异(包括野生种群和驯养种群之间的差异)可能为促进或阻碍热适应提供了遗传资源。然而,不利的基因型-环境互作和性状间的负相关性可能会普遍阻碍平均温度升高和临时极端情况下的联合进化。