Abstract

How ecological divergence causes strong reproductive isolation between populations in close geographic contact remains poorly understood at the genomic level. We here study this question in a stickleback fish population pair adapted to contiguous, ecologically different lake and stream habitats. Clinal whole-genome sequence data reveal numerous genome regions (nearly) fixed for alternative alleles over a distance of just a few hundred meters. This strong polygenic adaptive divergence must constitute a genome-wide barrier to gene flow because a steep cline in allele frequencies is observed across the entire genome, and because the cline center closely matches the habitat transition. Simulations confirm that such strong divergence can be maintained by polygenic selection despite high dispersal and small per-locus selection coefficients. Finally, comparing samples from near the habitat transition before and after an unusual ecological perturbation demonstrates the fragility of the balance between gene flow and selection. Overall, our study highlights the efficacy of divergent selection in maintaining reproductive isolation without physical isolation, and the analytical power of studying speciation at a fine eco-geographic and genomic scale.

Highlights

  • How ecological divergence causes strong reproductive isolation between populations in close geographic contact remains poorly understood at the genomic level

  • We present such an investigation in a threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus) population pair residing in parapatry in Misty Lake and its inlet stream (Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada)[17,18] (Fig. 1a)

  • Our first objective was to identify genome regions likely targeted by selection by performing a standard pairwise population comparison

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Summary

Introduction

How ecological divergence causes strong reproductive isolation between populations in close geographic contact remains poorly understood at the genomic level. An informative pattern in our clinal genomic data was that for all three SNP categories (selected, neutral, loDiff), the frequency of the stream allele increased substantially upstream of the marsh-stream transition – but only up to sampling site S4, that is, over c.

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