Unfiltered VCF for pink salmon rapid adaptation

Introduced and invasive species make excellent natural experiments for investigating rapid evolution. Here, we describe the effects of genetic drift and rapid genetic adaptation in pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) that were accidentally introduced to the Great Lakes via a single introduction eve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sparks, Morgan, Schraidt, Claire, Yin, Xiaoshen, Seeb, Lisa, Christie, Mark
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/8256947
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8256947
Description
Summary:Introduced and invasive species make excellent natural experiments for investigating rapid evolution. Here, we describe the effects of genetic drift and rapid genetic adaptation in pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) that were accidentally introduced to the Great Lakes via a single introduction event 31-generations ago. Using whole-genome resequencing for 134 fish spanning five sample groups across the native and introduced range, we estimate that the source population's effective population size was 146,886 at the time of introduction, whereas the founding population's effective population size was just 72—a 2040-fold decrease. As expected with a severe founder event, we show reductions in genome-wide measures of genetic diversity, specifically a 37.7% reduction in the number of SNPs and an 8.2% reduction in observed heterozygosity. Despite this decline in genetic diversity, we provide evidence for putative selection at 47 loci across multiple chromosomes in the introduced populations, including missense variants in genes associated with circadian rhythm, immunological response, and maturation, which match expected or known phenotypic changes in the Great Lakes. For one of these genes, we use a species-specific agent-based model to rule out genetic drift and conclude our results support a strong response to selection that occurred in a period gene (per2) that plays a predominant role in determining an organism's daily clock, matching large day-length differences experienced by introduced salmon during important phenological periods. Together, these results inform how populations might evolve rapidly to new environments, even with a small pool of standing genetic variation. Funding provided by: National Science FoundationCrossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001Award Number: DEB-1856710 This VCF file contains whole-genome resequence data with SNPs called from GATK best practices. This file has been filtered for GATK flagged SNPs but otherwise is unfiltered (to allow users to filter ...