Past and future climate effects on population structure and diversity of North Pacific surfgrasses

Author:

Tavares Ana I.12ORCID,Assis Jorge13ORCID,Anderson Laura4,Raimondi Pete4,Coelho Nelson Castilho15,Paulino Cristina16,Ladah Lydia7,Nakaoka Masahiro8,Pearson Gareth A.1,Serrao Ester A.1

Affiliation:

1. Center of Marine Sciences (CCMAR‐CIMAR) Universidade do Algarve Faro Portugal

2. Department of Biological and Environmental Science, College of Arts and Sciences Qatar University Doha Qatar

3. Faculty of Bioscience and Aquaculture Nord Universitet Bodø Norway

4. Long Marine Laboratory University of California Santa Cruz California USA

5. Department of Computational and Systems Biology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

6. GreenCoLab ‐ Associação Oceano Verde Universidade do Algarve Faro Portugal

7. Department of Biological Oceanography CICESE, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada Ensenada Baja California Mexico

8. Akkeshi Marine Station, Field Science Center for Northern Biosphere Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimUnderstanding the impacts of past and future climate change on genetic diversity and structure is a current major research gap. We ask whether past range shifts explain the observed genetic diversity of surfgrass species and if future climate change projections anticipate genetic diversity losses. Our study aims to identify regions of long‐term climate suitability with higher and unique seagrass genetic diversity and predict future impacts of climate change on them.LocationNortheast Pacific.Time PeriodAnalyses considered a timeframe from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 20 kybp) until one Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenario of future climate changes (RCP 8.5; 2100).Major Taxa StudiedTwo seagrass species belonging to the genus Phyllospadix.MethodsWe estimated population genetic diversity and structure using 11 polymorphic microsatellite markers. We predicted the distribution of the species for the present, LGM, and near future (RCP 8.5, no climate mitigation) using Species Distribution Models (SDMs).ResultsSDMs revealed southward range shifts during the LGM and potential poleward expansions in the future. Genetic diversity of Phyllospadix torreyi decreases from north to south, but in Phyllospadix scouleri the trend is variable. Phyllospadix scouleri displays signals of genome admixture at the southernmost and northernmost edges of its distribution.Main ConclusionsThe genetic patterns observed in the present reveal the influence of climate‐driven range shifts in the past and suggest further consequences of climate change in the future, with potential loss of unique gene pools. This study also shows that investigating climate links to present genetic information at multiple timescales can establish a historical context for analyses of the future evolutionary history of populations.

Funder

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

David and Lucile Packard Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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