Abstract

Mitochondrial DNA analyses indicate that the Bay of Fundy population of the intertidal tellinid bivalve Macoma petalum is genetically divergent from coastal populations in the Gulf of Maine and Nova Scotia. To further examine the evolutionary forces driving this genetic break, we performed double digest genotype by sequencing (GBS) to survey the nuclear genome for evidence of both neutral and selective processes shaping this pattern. The resulting reads were mapped to a partial transcriptome of its sister species, M. balthica, to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in protein‐coding genes. Population assignment tests, principle components analyses, analysis of molecular variance, and outlier tests all support differentiation between the Bay of Fundy genotype and the genotypes of the Gulf of Maine, Gulf of St. Lawrence, and Nova Scotia. Although both neutral and non‐neutral patterns of genetic subdivision were significant, genetic structure among the regions was nearly 20 times higher for loci putatively under selection, suggesting a strong role for natural selection as a driver of genetic diversity in this species. Genetic differences were the greatest between the Bay of Fundy and all other population samples, and some outlier proteins were involved in immunity‐related processes. Our results suggest that in combination with limited gene flow across the mouth of the Bay of Fundy, local adaptation is an important driver of intraspecific genetic variation in this marine species with high dispersal potential.

Highlights

  • Historic disturbances play a major role in shaping the population structure of marine invertebrates (Grantham, Eckert, & Shanks, 2003)

  • While previous work on Macoma petalum identified a genetic discontinuity at or near the mouth of the Bay of Fundy (Einfeldt et al, 2017), this study extends that finding by demonstrating weak differentiation at neutral loci and strong natural selection across this range boundary

  • Our results show that divergence across this break is driven by both limited gene flow resulting from circular currents that inhibit the mixing of the Gulf of Maine and the Bay of Fundy waters and local selective pressures on populations within the Bay of Fundy mudflats

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Summary

Introduction

Historic disturbances play a major role in shaping the population structure of marine invertebrates (Grantham, Eckert, & Shanks, 2003). For species surviving in southern refugia, postglacial recolonization is characterized by expansion of a subset of the southern genotypes, resulting in less diversity in the newly colonized northern populations (Hewitt, 1996, 2000; Maggs et al, 2008) Such genetic differentiation is not expected to be directly correlated with distance between populations in marine environments as a result of dispersal abilities, including planktonic larvae and rafting of marine invertebrates, or recent recolonization events (White et al, 2010)

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