Ecological disturbance reduces genomic diversity across an Alpine whitefish adaptive radiation

Author:

Frei David12ORCID,Mwaiko Salome1ORCID,Seehausen Ole12ORCID,Feulner Philine G. D.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fish Ecology and Evolution EAWAG Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Kastanienbaum Switzerland

2. Division of Aquatic Ecology and Evolution, Institute of Ecology and Evolution University of Bern Bern Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractGenomic diversity is associated with the adaptive potential of a population and thereby impacts the extinction risk of a species during environmental change. However, empirical data on genomic diversity of populations before environmental perturbations are rare and hence our understanding of the impact of perturbation on diversity is often limited. We here assess genomic diversity utilising whole‐genome resequencing data from all four species of the Lake Constance Alpine whitefish radiation. Our data covers a period of strong but transient anthropogenic environmental change and permits us to track changes in genomic diversity in all species over time. Genomic diversity became strongly reduced during the period of anthropogenic disturbance and has not recovered yet. The decrease in genomic diversity varies between 18% and 30%, depending on the species. Interspecific allele frequency differences of SNPs located in potentially ecologically relevant genes were homogenized over time. This suggests that in addition to the reduction of genome‐wide genetic variation, the differentiation that evolved in the process of adaptation to alternative ecologies between species might have been lost during the ecological disturbance. The erosion of substantial amounts of genomic variation within just a few generations in combination with the loss of potentially adaptive genomic differentiation, both of which had evolved over thousands of years, demonstrates the sensitivity of biodiversity in evolutionary young adaptive radiations towards environmental disturbance. Natural history collections, such as the one used for this study, are instrumental in the assessment of genomic consequences of anthropogenic environmental change. Historical samples enable us to document biodiversity loss against the shifting baseline syndrome and advance our understanding of the need for efficient biodiversity conservation on a global scale.

Funder

Eidgenössische Anstalt für Wasserversorgung Abwasserreinigung und Gewässerschutz

European Regional Development Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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