Lewis Rebecca, Pointer Michael D, Friend Lucy, Gage Matthew J G, Spurgin Lewis G
School of Biological Sciences University of East Anglia Norwich UK.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Apr 29;14(5):e11313. doi: 10.1002/ece3.11313. eCollection 2024 May.
Small, isolated populations are often characterised by low levels of genetic diversity. This can result in inbreeding depression and reduced capacity to adapt to changes in the environment, and therefore higher risk of extinction. However, sometimes these populations can be rescued if allowed to increase in size or if migrants enter, bringing in new allelic variation and thus increasing genetic diversity. This study uses experimental manipulation of population size and migration to quantify their effects on fitness in a challenging environment to better understand genetic rescue. Using small, replicated populations of experimentally evolved to different temperature regimes we tested genetic and demographic rescue, by performing large-scale manipulations of population size and migration and examining fitness consequences over multiple generations. We measured fitness in high temperature (38°C) thermal lines maintained at their usual 'small' population size of = 100 individuals, and with 'large' scaled up duplicates containing ≈10,000 individuals. We compared these large lines with and without migration ( = 0.1) for 10 generations. Additionally, we assessed the effects of outcrossing at an individual level, by comparing fitness of hybrid (thermal line × stock) offspring with within-line crosses. We found that, at the population level, a rapid increase in the number of individuals in the population resulted in reduced fitness (represented by reproductive output and survival through heatwave conditions), regardless of migration. However, at an individual level, the hybrid offspring of migrants with native individuals generally demonstrated increased longevity in high temperature conditions compared with individuals from thermal selection lines. Overall, these populations showed no evidence that demographic manipulations led to genetic or evolutionary rescue. Following the effects of migration in individuals over several generations may be the next step in unravelling these conflicting results. We discuss these findings in the context of conservation intervention.
小型孤立种群通常具有遗传多样性水平低的特征。这可能导致近亲繁殖衰退以及适应环境变化的能力下降,从而增加灭绝风险。然而,有时如果这些种群规模得以扩大或者有外来个体迁入,带来新的等位基因变异进而增加遗传多样性,它们就有可能得到拯救。本研究通过对种群规模和迁移进行实验性操纵,以量化它们在具有挑战性的环境中对适合度的影响,从而更好地理解遗传拯救。我们使用经过实验进化到不同温度条件下的小型重复种群,通过大规模操纵种群规模和迁移,并考察多代的适合度后果,来测试遗传拯救和种群统计学拯救。我们在高温(38°C)热适应品系中测量适合度,这些品系维持其通常的“小”种群规模,即(N = 100)个个体,以及规模扩大的“大”重复品系,包含约(10000)个个体。我们将这些大种群品系在有迁移((m = 0.1))和无迁移的情况下比较了10代。此外,我们通过比较杂种(热适应品系×原种)后代与品系内杂交后代的适合度,在个体水平上评估了杂交的影响。我们发现,在种群水平上,无论有无迁移,种群中个体数量的快速增加都会导致适合度降低(以繁殖输出和在热浪条件下的存活率表示)。然而,在个体水平上,与来自热适应选择品系的个体相比,外来个体与本地个体的杂交后代在高温条件下通常表现出更长的寿命。总体而言,这些种群没有证据表明种群统计学操纵导致了遗传或进化拯救。追踪个体在几代中的迁移影响可能是解开这些矛盾结果的下一步。我们在保护干预的背景下讨论了这些发现。