RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel

The two primary ways that species respond to heterogeneous environments is through local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity. The American eel (Anguilla rostrata) presents a paradox; despite inhabiting drastically different environments [1], the species is panmictic [2, 3]. Spawning takes place onl...

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Main Authors: Pavey, Scott, Gaudin, Jérémy, Normandeau, Éric, Dionne, Mélanie, Castonguay, Martin, Audet, Céline, Bernatchez, Louis
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268 2023-05-15T16:29:52+02:00 RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel Pavey, Scott Gaudin, Jérémy Normandeau, Éric Dionne, Mélanie Castonguay, Martin Audet, Céline Bernatchez, Louis 2015-06-15 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268 en eng Elsevier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268 other CorpusUL envir geo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2015 fttriple https://doi.org/20.500.11794/268 2023-01-22T17:14:15Z The two primary ways that species respond to heterogeneous environments is through local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity. The American eel (Anguilla rostrata) presents a paradox; despite inhabiting drastically different environments [1], the species is panmictic [2, 3]. Spawning takes place only in the southern Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean [1]. Then, the planktonic larvae (leptocephali) disperse to rearing locations from Cuba to Greenland, and juveniles colonize either freshwater or brackish/saltwater habitats, where they spend 3–25 years before returning to the Sargasso Sea to spawn as a panmictic species. Depending on rearing habitat, individuals exhibit drastically different ecotypes [4–6]. In particular, individuals rearing in freshwater tend to grow slowly and mature older and are more likely to be female in comparison to individuals that rear in brackish/saltwater [4, 6]. The hypothesis that phenotypic plasticity alone can account for all of the differences was not supported by three independent controlled experiments [7–10]. Here, we present a genome-wide association study that demonstrates a polygenic basis that discriminates these habitat-specific ecotypes belonging to the same panmictic population. We found that 331 co-varying loci out of 42,424 initially considered were associated with the divergent ecotypes, allowing a reclassification of 89.6%. These 331 SNPs are associated with 101 genes that represent vascular and morphological development, calcium ion regulation, growth and transcription factors, and olfactory receptors. Our results are consistent with divergent natural selection of phenotypes and/or genotype-dependent habitat choice by individuals that results in these genetic differences between habitats, occurring every generation anew in this panmictic species. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland Unknown Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic envir
geo
spellingShingle envir
geo
Pavey, Scott
Gaudin, Jérémy
Normandeau, Éric
Dionne, Mélanie
Castonguay, Martin
Audet, Céline
Bernatchez, Louis
RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
topic_facet envir
geo
description The two primary ways that species respond to heterogeneous environments is through local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity. The American eel (Anguilla rostrata) presents a paradox; despite inhabiting drastically different environments [1], the species is panmictic [2, 3]. Spawning takes place only in the southern Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean [1]. Then, the planktonic larvae (leptocephali) disperse to rearing locations from Cuba to Greenland, and juveniles colonize either freshwater or brackish/saltwater habitats, where they spend 3–25 years before returning to the Sargasso Sea to spawn as a panmictic species. Depending on rearing habitat, individuals exhibit drastically different ecotypes [4–6]. In particular, individuals rearing in freshwater tend to grow slowly and mature older and are more likely to be female in comparison to individuals that rear in brackish/saltwater [4, 6]. The hypothesis that phenotypic plasticity alone can account for all of the differences was not supported by three independent controlled experiments [7–10]. Here, we present a genome-wide association study that demonstrates a polygenic basis that discriminates these habitat-specific ecotypes belonging to the same panmictic population. We found that 331 co-varying loci out of 42,424 initially considered were associated with the divergent ecotypes, allowing a reclassification of 89.6%. These 331 SNPs are associated with 101 genes that represent vascular and morphological development, calcium ion regulation, growth and transcription factors, and olfactory receptors. Our results are consistent with divergent natural selection of phenotypes and/or genotype-dependent habitat choice by individuals that results in these genetic differences between habitats, occurring every generation anew in this panmictic species.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Pavey, Scott
Gaudin, Jérémy
Normandeau, Éric
Dionne, Mélanie
Castonguay, Martin
Audet, Céline
Bernatchez, Louis
author_facet Pavey, Scott
Gaudin, Jérémy
Normandeau, Éric
Dionne, Mélanie
Castonguay, Martin
Audet, Céline
Bernatchez, Louis
author_sort Pavey, Scott
title RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
title_short RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
title_full RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
title_fullStr RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
title_full_unstemmed RAD Sequencing Highlights Polygenic Discrimination of Habitat Ecotypes in the Panmictic American Eel
title_sort rad sequencing highlights polygenic discrimination of habitat ecotypes in the panmictic american eel
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source CorpusUL
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/268
op_rights other
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11794/268
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