Outbreeding reduces survival during metamorphosis in a headwater stream salamander

Author:

Lowe Winsor H.1ORCID,Addis Brett R.1ORCID,Cochrane Madaline M.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Biological Sciences University of Montana Missoula Montana USA

Abstract

AbstractAssessing direct fitness effects of individual genetic diversity is challenging due to the intensive and long‐term data needed to quantify survival and reproduction in the wild. But resolving these effects is necessary to determine how inbreeding and outbreeding influence eco‐evolutionary processes. We used 8 years of capture–recapture data and single nucleotide polymorphism genotypes for 1906 individuals to test for effects of individual heterozygosity on stage‐specific survival probabilities in the salamander Gyrinophilus porphyriticus. The life cycle of G. porphyriticus includes an aquatic larval stage followed by metamorphosis into a semi‐aquatic adult stage. In our study populations, the larval stage lasts 6–10 years, metamorphosis takes several months, and lifespan can reach 20 years. Previous studies showed that metamorphosis is a sensitive life stage, leading us to predict that fitness effects of individual heterozygosity would occur during metamorphosis. Consistent with this prediction, monthly probability of survival during metamorphosis declined with multi‐locus heterozygosity (MLH), from 0.38 at the lowest MLH (0.10) to 0.06 at the highest MLH (0.38), a reduction of 84%. Body condition of larvae also declined significantly with increasing MLH. These relationships were consistent in the three study streams. With evidence of localised inbreeding within streams, these results suggest that outbreeding disrupts adaptations in pre‐metamorphic and metamorphic individuals to environmental gradients along streams, adding to evidence that headwater streams are hotspots of microgeographic adaptation. Our results also underscore the importance of incorporating life history in analyses of the fitness effects of individual genetic diversity and suggest that metamorphosis and similar discrete life stage transitions may be critical periods of viability selection.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Reference151 articles.

1. Addis B. R.(2019).Causes of variation in dispersal distance in the stream salamanderGyrinophilus porphyriticus. (PhD) University of Montana Missoula MT.

2. Addis B. R. Cochrane M. M. &Lowe W. H.(2024).Catalog of NCBI sequence read archive (SRA) data for salamanders at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest 2012–2021 ver 1.https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/6df7199d751ec81315395a042cbd8083

3. Long‐term survival probability, not current habitat quality, predicts dispersal distance in a stream salamander

4. Environmentally Associated Variation in Dispersal Distance Affects Inbreeding Risk in a Stream Salamander

5. A distance–performance trade‐off in the phenotypic basis of dispersal

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