Low genome‐wide divergence between two lizard populations with high adaptive phenotypic differentiation

Usually, adaptive phenotypic differentiation is paralleled by genetic divergence between locally adapted populations. However, adaptation can also happen in a scenario of nonsignificant genetic divergence due to intense gene flow and/or recent differentiation. While this phenomenon is rarely publish...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Llanos Garrido, Alejandro, Pérez Tris, Javier, Díaz González-Serrano, José Augusto
Formato: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:España
Recursos:Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM)
Repositorio:Docta Complutense
Idioma:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:docta.ucm.es:20.500.14352/4848
Acesso em linha:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/4848
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:598.112.23
Genotyping by sequencing
Isolation by environment
Local adaptation
Psammodromus algirus
Ecología (Biología)
Evolución
Genética
Reptiles
Zoología
2401.06 Ecología animal
2409 Genética
2401.16 Herpetología
2401 Biología Animal (Zoología)
Descrição
Resumo:Usually, adaptive phenotypic differentiation is paralleled by genetic divergence between locally adapted populations. However, adaptation can also happen in a scenario of nonsignificant genetic divergence due to intense gene flow and/or recent differentiation. While this phenomenon is rarely published, findings on incipient ecologically driven divergence or isolation by adaptation are relatively common, which could confound our understanding about the frequency at which they actually occur in nature. Here, we explore genome-wide traces of divergence between two populations of the lacertid lizard Psammodromus algirus separated by a 600 m elevational gradient. These populations seem to be differentially adapted to their environments despite showing low levels of genetic differentiation (according to previously studies of mtDNA and microsatellite data). We performed a search for outliers (i.e., loci subject to selection) trying to identify specific loci with FST statistics significantly higher than those expected on the basis of overall, genome-wide estimates of genetic divergence. We find that local phenotypic adaptation (in terms of a wide diversity of characters) was not accompanied by genome-wide differentiation, even when we maximized the chances of unveiling such differentiation at particular loci with FSTbased outlier detection tests. Instead, our analyses confirmed the lack of genomewide differentiation on the basis of more than 70,000 SNPs, which is concordant with a scenario of local adaptation without isolation by environment. Our results add evidence to previous studies in which local adaptation does not lead to any kind of isolation (or early stages of ecological speciation), but maintains phenotypic divergence despite the lack of a differentiated genomic background.