Adaptation to seasonal reproduction and environment‐associated factors drive temporal and spatial differentiation in northwest Atlantic herring despite gene flow

Author:

Fuentes‐Pardo Angela P.12ORCID,Stanley Ryan3ORCID,Bourne Christina4,Singh Rabindra5,Emond Kim6,Pinkham Lisa7,McDermid Jenni L.8,Andersson Leif29ORCID,Ruzzante Daniel E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

3. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Maritimes Region Dartmouth Nova Scotia Canada

4. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Centre St John's Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

5. Fisheries and Oceans Canada St. Andrews Biological Station St. Andrews New Brunswick Canada

6. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Maurice Lamontagne Institute Mont‐Joli Quebec Canada

7. Department of Marine Resources West Boothbay Harbor Maine USA

8. Fisheries and Oceans Canada Gulf Fisheries Centre Moncton New Brunswick Canada

9. Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding how marine organisms adapt to local environments is crucial for predicting how populations will respond to global climate change. The genomic basis, environmental factors and evolutionary processes involved in local adaptation are however not well understood. Here we use Atlantic herring, an abundant, migratory and widely distributed marine fish with substantial genomic resources, as a model organism to evaluate local adaptation. We examined genomic variation and its correlation with environmental variables across a broad environmental gradient, for 15 spawning aggregations in Atlantic Canada and the United States. We then compared our results with available genomic data of northeast Atlantic populations. We confirmed that population structure lies in a fraction of the genome including likely adaptive genetic variants of functional importance. We discovered 10 highly differentiated genomic regions distributed across four chromosomes. Nine regions show strong association with seasonal reproduction. One region, corresponding to a known inversion on chromosome 12, underlies a latitudinal pattern discriminating populations north and south of a biogeographic transition zone on the Scotian Shelf. Genome–environment associations indicate that winter seawater temperature best correlates with the latitudinal pattern of this inversion. The variation at two so‐called ‘islands of divergence’ related to seasonal reproduction appear to be private to the northwest Atlantic. Populations in the northwest and northeast Atlantic share variation at four of these divergent regions, simultaneously displaying significant diversity in haplotype composition at another four regions, which includes an undescribed structural variant approximately 7.7 Mb long on chromosome 8. Our results suggest that the timing and geographic location of spawning and early development may be under diverse selective pressures related to allelic fitness across environments. Our study highlights the role of genomic architecture, ancestral haplotypes and selection in maintaining adaptive divergence in species with large population sizes and presumably high gene flow.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Wiley

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