Abstract

The interplay between recombination rate, genetic drift and selection modulates variation in genome-wide ancestry. Understanding the selective processes at play is of prime importance toward predicting potential beneficial or negative effects of supplementation with domestic strains (i.e., human-introduced strains). In a system of lacustrine populations supplemented with a single domestic strain, we documented how population genetic diversity and stocking intensity produced lake-specific patterns of domestic ancestry by taking the species’ local recombination rate into consideration. We used 552 Brook Charr (Salvelinus fontinalis) from 22 small lacustrine populations, genotyped at ~32,400 mapped SNPs. We observed highly variable patterns of domestic ancestry between each of the 22 populations without any consistency in introgression patterns of the domestic ancestry. Our results suggest that such lake-specific ancestry patterns were mainly due to variable associative overdominance (AOD) effects among populations (i.e., potential positive effects due to the masking of possible deleterious alleles in low recombining regions). Signatures of AOD effects were also emphasized by highly variable patterns of genetic diversity among and within lakes, potentially driven by predominant genetic drift in those small isolated populations. Local negative effects such as negative epistasis (i.e., potential genetic incompatibilities between the native and the introduced population) potentially reflecting precursory signs of outbreeding depression were also observed at a chromosomal scale. Consequently, in order to improve conservation practices and management strategies, it became necessary to assess the consequences of supplementation at the population level by taking into account both genetic diversity and stocking intensity when available.

Highlights

  • Genetic admixture resulting from introgressive hybridization is a fundamental mechanism influencing populations and species evolution [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Our research group previously evaluated the relationship between the domestic ancestry and the intensity of stocking practices [28], and we subsequently investigated the role of the local recombination rate in shaping the genome-wide ancestry landscape [31]

  • We investigated how domestic ancestry was influenced by local genetic diversity, stocking intensity and recombination rate at the linkage group (LG) level

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic admixture resulting from introgressive hybridization is a fundamental mechanism influencing populations and species evolution [1,2,3,4,5]. This may result from natural secondary contacts following an allopatric period of geographic isolation [3,6]. Genetic admixture may result from human activities, including biological invasions, humanmediated translocation [7,8,9,10] or the supplementation of wild populations with non-local sources [11,12,13]. Despite the plethora of studies addressing these issues, few have documented how the interplay between the introduction pressure of foreign alleles (e.g., supplementation history), genetic drift and selection may produce complex admixture landscapes along the genome [21,22]

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