Ecological niche modelling and population genomics provide insights into the geographic and demographic ‘explosion’ of a non‐indigenous salmonid

Abstract Aim Effective management of non‐indigenous species requires knowledge of their dispersal factors and founder events. We aim to identify the main environmental drivers favouring dispersal events along the invasion gradient and to characterize the spatial patterns of genetic diversity in fera...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Diversity and Distributions
Main Authors: Maduna, Simo Njabulo, Aspholm, Paul Eric, Hansen, Ane‐Sofie Bednarczyk, Klütsch, Cornelya F. C., Hagen, Snorre B.
Other Authors: Norsk institutt for Bioøkonomi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ddi.13811
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/ddi.13811
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Summary:Abstract Aim Effective management of non‐indigenous species requires knowledge of their dispersal factors and founder events. We aim to identify the main environmental drivers favouring dispersal events along the invasion gradient and to characterize the spatial patterns of genetic diversity in feral populations of the non‐native pink salmon within its epicentre of invasion in Norway. Location Mainland Norway and North Atlantic Basin. Methods We first conducted SDM using four modelling techniques with varying levels of complexity, which encompassed both regression‐based and tree‐based machine‐learning algorithms, using climatic data from the present to 2050. Then, we used the triple‐enzyme restriction‐site associated DNA sequencing (3RADseq) approach to genotype over 30,000 high‐quality single‐nucleotide polymorphisms to elucidate the patterns of genetic diversity and gene flow within the pink salmon putative invasion hotspot. Results We discovered temperature‐ and precipitation‐related variables drove pink salmon distributional shifts across its non‐native ranges and that climate‐induced favourable areas will remain stable for the next 30 years. In addition, all SDMs identified north‐eastern Norway as the epicentre of the pink salmon invasion, and genomic data revealed that there was minimal variation in genetic diversity across the sampled populations at a genome‐wide level in this region. While utilizing a specific group of ‘diagnostic’ SNPs, we observed a significant degree of genetic differentiation, ranging from moderate to substantial, and detected four hierarchical genetic clusters concordant with geography. Main Conclusions Our findings suggest that fluctuations in climate extreme events associated with ongoing climate change will likely maintain environmental favourability for the pink salmon outside its ‘native’/introduced ranges. Locally invaded rivers are themselves potential source populations of invaders in the ongoing secondary spread of pink salmon in Northern Norway. Our study shows that SDMs ...