Abstract
Understanding the biological processes involved in genetic differentiation and divergence between populations within species is a pivotal aim in evolutionary biology. One particular phenomenon that requires clarification is the maintenance of genetic barriers despite the high potential for gene flow in the marine environment. Such patterns have been attributed to limited dispersal or local adaptation, and to a lesser extent to the demographic history of the species. The corkwing wrasse (Symphodus melops) is an example of a marine fish species where regions of particular strong divergence are observed. One such genetic break occurred at a surprisingly small spatial scale (FST ~0.1), over a short coastline (<60km) in the North Sea-Skagerrak transition area in southwestern Norway. Here, we investigate the observed divergence and purported reproductive isolation using genome resequencing. Our results suggest that historical events during the post-glacial recolonization route can explain the present population structure of the corkwing wrasse in the northeast Atlantic. While the divergence across the break is strong, we detected ongoing gene flow between populations over the break suggesting recent contact or negative selection against hybrids. Moreover, we found few outlier loci and no clear genomic regions potentially being under selection. We concluded that neutral processes and random genetic drift e.g., due to founder events during colonization have shaped the population structure in this species in Northern Europe. Our findings underline the need to take into account the demographic process in studies of divergence processes.
Highlights
Many marine species present a pelagic stage during their life cycle (Hauser & Carvalho, 2008), with high potential for dispersal and gene flow
Our results suggest that historical events during the post-glacial re-colonization route, can explain the present population structure of the corkwing wrasse in the northeast Atlantic
Due to a relatively low minimum read depth filter (x4) it is likely that the proportion of heterozygous SNPs is underestimated, which can introduce a systematic error especially in windowed analyses which rely on breakpoints like IBD haplotypes (Meynert, Bicknell, Hurles, Jackson, & Taylor, 2013)
Summary
Many marine species present a pelagic stage during their life cycle (Hauser & Carvalho, 2008), with high potential for dispersal and gene flow. While such life cycles should generally result in panmixia and weak population divergence (Palsboll, Berube, & Allendorf, 2007), some species display genetic patterns of reproductive isolation indicative of barriers to random mating (Ravinet et al, 2017; Storfer, Murphy, Spear, Holderegger, & Waits, 2010). During the last glacial maximum, cold-adapted fish species are believed to have persisted in Northern Europe, while temperate fish species, such as the wrasses, found refuge in the Mediterranean and the surrounding coast of the Iberian Peninsula (Kettle, Morales-Muñiz, Roselló-Izquierdo, Heinrich, & Vøllestad, 2011)
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