Abstract

A thorough reconstruction of historical processes is essential for a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms shaping patterns of genetic diversity. Indeed, past and current conditions influencing effective population size have important evolutionary implications for the efficacy of selection, increased accumulation of deleterious mutations, and loss of adaptive potential. Here, we gather extensive genome-wide data that represent the extant diversity of the Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) to address two objectives. We demonstrate that a single glacial refugium is the source of most of the present-day genetic diversity, with detectable inputs from a putative secondary micro-refugium. We found statistical support for a scenario whereby ancestral populations located south of the ice sheets expanded recently, swamping out most of the diversity from other putative micro-refugia. Demographic inferences revealed that genetic diversity was also affected by linked selection in large parts of the genome. Moreover, we demonstrate that the recent demographic history of this species generated regional differences in the load of deleterious mutations among populations, a finding that mirrors recent results from human populations and provides increased support for models of expansion load. We propose that insights from these historical inferences should be better integrated in conservation planning of wild organisms, which currently focuses largely on neutral genetic diversity and local adaptation, with the role of potentially maladaptive variation being generally ignored.

Highlights

  • Historical climate variation has had a major influence on the current distribution of species genetic diversity [1]

  • Consistent with earlier work based on non-genomic data, our analyses indicate that the southern-most populations are the most ancestral and suggest that a single southern refugium explains most of the observed patterns in the distribution of genetic diversity

  • Under a single refugial expansion scenario, one would expect genetic diversity to be highest in the ancestral refugium and a linear decrease as a function of the distance from the source, as documented in humans [40]

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Summary

Introduction

Historical climate variation has had a major influence on the current distribution of species genetic diversity [1]. The effects of long-term climate change combined with recent human-induced population declines in wild animal populations can foster genetic changes including a loss of genetic diversity, increased inbreeding, increased load of deleterious mutations, and a loss of local adaptation [5]. In this context, understanding the impacts of historical climatic oscillations on the demographic history of a given species is crucial.

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