Abstract

Whole genome duplication (WGD) is often considered to be mechanistically associated with species diversification. Such ideas have been anecdotally attached to a WGD at the stem of the salmonid fish family, but remain untested. Here, we characterized an extensive set of gene paralogues retained from the salmonid WGD, in species covering the major lineages (subfamilies Salmoninae, Thymallinae and Coregoninae). By combining the data in calibrated relaxed molecular clock analyses, we provide the first well-constrained and direct estimate for the timing of the salmonid WGD. Our results suggest that the event occurred no later in time than 88 Ma and that 40–50 Myr passed subsequently until the subfamilies diverged. We also recovered a Thymallinae–Coregoninae sister relationship with maximal support. Comparative phylogenetic tests demonstrated that salmonid diversification patterns are closely allied in time with the continuous climatic cooling that followed the Eocene–Oligocene transition, with the highest diversification rates coinciding with recent ice ages. Further tests revealed considerably higher speciation rates in lineages that evolved anadromy—the physiological capacity to migrate between fresh and seawater—than in sister groups that retained the ancestral state of freshwater residency. Anadromy, which probably evolved in response to climatic cooling, is an established catalyst of genetic isolation, particularly during environmental perturbations (for example, glaciation cycles). We thus conclude that climate-linked ecophysiological factors, rather than WGD, were the primary drivers of salmonid diversification.

Highlights

  • Gene duplication is a primary evolutionary source of new genetic material and a key mechanism allowing novel gene functions to evolve [1,2]

  • While there is experimental support for such models in yeast [9], comparative phylogenetic tests of diversification rates during plant evolution suggest that newly formed polyploid lineages undergo speciation more slowly and go extinct more rapidly than diploids [10]

  • Comparative phylogenetic tests did identify an increase in diversification rate at the base of teleost fish evolution [11], on the branch where whole genome duplication (WGD) occurred [12], which might be considered to support earlier hypotheses that WGD was a driving factor in the radiation of this species-rich lineage (e.g. [13])

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Summary

Introduction

Gene duplication is a primary evolutionary source of new genetic material and a key mechanism allowing novel gene functions to evolve [1,2]. WGD occurred in the ancient ancestors of several vertebrate, plant and fungal lineages (which are considered paleopolyploids), and many authors have suggested this may have facilitated species diversification [2,3,4,5,6]. While there is experimental support for such models in yeast [9], comparative phylogenetic tests of diversification rates during plant evolution suggest that newly formed polyploid lineages undergo speciation more slowly and go extinct more rapidly than diploids [10]. Comparative phylogenetic tests did identify an increase in diversification rate at the base of teleost fish evolution [11], on the branch where WGD occurred [12], which might be considered to support earlier hypotheses that WGD was a driving factor in the radiation of this species-rich lineage

WGD species 3 WGD species 2 WGD species 3 WGD species 2
Results
F Thymallinae
Findings
Discussion
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