Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Instituto para el Desarrollo Sustentable, Santiago, Chile.
Millennium Institute Center for Genome Regulation (CRG), Santiago, Chile.
Genome Biol Evol. 2024 May 2;16(5). doi: 10.1093/gbe/evae085.
The increased availability of quality genomic data has greatly improved the scope and resolution of our understanding of the recent evolutionary history of wild species adapted to extreme environments and their susceptibility to anthropogenic impacts. The guanaco (Lama guanicoe), the largest wild ungulate in South America, is a good example. The guanaco is well adapted to a wide range of habitats, including the Sechura Desert, the high Andes Mountains to the north, and the extreme temperatures and conditions of Navarino Island to the south. Guanacos also have a long history of overexploitation by humans. To assess the evolutionary impact of these challenging habitats on the genomic diversity, we analyzed 38 genomes (∼10 to 16×) throughout their extensive latitudinal distribution from the Sechura and Atacama Desert to southward into Tierra del Fuego Island. These included analyses of patterns of unique differentiation in the north and geographic region further south with admixture among L. g. cacsilensis and L. g. guanicoe. Our findings provide new insights on the divergence of the subspecies ∼800,000 yr BP and document two divergent demographic trajectories and to the initial expansion of guanaco into the more southern portions of the Atacama Desert. Patagonian guanacos have experienced contemporary reductions in effective population sizes, likely the consequence of anthropogenic impacts. The lowest levels of genetic diversity corresponded to their northern and western limits of distribution and some varying degrees of genetic differentiation. Adaptive genomic diversity was strongly linked with environmental variables and was linked with colonization toward the south followed by adaptation.
高质量基因组数据的可用性增加,极大地提高了我们对适应极端环境的野生物种的近期进化历史及其对人为影响的敏感性的理解范围和分辨率。美洲驼(Lama guanicoe)就是一个很好的例子。美洲驼很好地适应了广泛的栖息地,包括塞丘拉沙漠、北部的安第斯山脉以及南部的纳瓦里诺岛的极端温度和条件。美洲驼也长期受到人类的过度开发。为了评估这些具有挑战性的栖息地对基因组多样性的进化影响,我们分析了 38 个基因组(约 10 到 16 倍),这些基因组分布在从塞丘拉沙漠和阿塔卡马沙漠到火地岛南部的广泛纬度范围内。这包括对北部和地理区域的独特分化模式的分析,以及在更南部与 L. g. cacsilensis 和 L. g. guanicoe 之间的混合。我们的研究结果为亚种约 80 万年前的分化提供了新的见解,并记录了两个不同的人口动态轨迹以及美洲驼最初向阿塔卡马沙漠更南部扩张的情况。巴塔哥尼亚美洲驼的有效种群数量经历了当代减少,这可能是人为影响的结果。遗传多样性的最低水平与它们的北部和西部分布范围以及某些不同程度的遗传分化相对应。适应性基因组多样性与环境变量密切相关,并与向南的殖民化以及随后的适应有关。