Sweepstakes reproductive success via pervasive and recurrent selective sweeps

Highly fecund natural populations characterized by high early mortality abound, yet our knowledge about their recruitment dynamics is somewhat rudimentary. This knowledge gap has implications for our understanding of genetic variation, population connectivity, local adaptation, and the resilience of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arnason, Einar, Koskela, Jere, Halldórsdóttir, Katrín, Eldon, Bjarki
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7658019
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.bcc2fqzgx
Description
Summary:Highly fecund natural populations characterized by high early mortality abound, yet our knowledge about their recruitment dynamics is somewhat rudimentary. This knowledge gap has implications for our understanding of genetic variation, population connectivity, local adaptation, and the resilience of highly fecund populations. The concept of sweepstakes reproductive success, which posits a considerable variance and skew in individual reproductive output, is key to understanding the distribution of individual reproductive success. However, it still needs to be determined whether highly fecund organisms reproduce through sweepstakes and, if they do, the relative roles of neutral and selective sweepstakes. Here we use coalescent-based statistical analysis of population genomic data to show that selective sweepstakes likely explain recruitment dynamics in the highly fecund Atlantic cod. We show that the Kingman coalescent (modeling no sweepstakes) and the Xi-Beta coalescent (modeling random sweepstakes), including complex demography and background selection, do not provide an adequate fit for the data. The Durrett-Schweinsberg coalescent, in which selective sweepstakes result from recurrent and pervasive selective sweeps of new mutations, offers greater explanatory power. Our results show that models of sweepstakes reproduction and multiple-merger coalescents are relevant and necessary for understanding genetic diversity in highly fecund natural populations. These findings have fundamental implications for understanding the recruitment variation of fish stocks and general evolutionary genomics of high-fecundity organisms. The data are presented as zipped archives of plain text files of site frequency spectrum and 100 bootstrap values for each chromosome and both likelihoods. The data are readable, for example, with R. Funding provided by: Icelandic Research Fund Grant of Excellence*Crossref Funder Registry ID: Award Number: 185151-051Funding provided by: Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftCrossref Funder Registry ID: ...