Genomic insights of evolutionary divergence and life history innovations in Antarctic brittle stars

Author:

Lau Sally C. Y.12ORCID,Strugnell Jan M.123ORCID,Sands Chester J.4ORCID,Silva Catarina N. S.1ORCID,Wilson Nerida G.567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture and College of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

2. Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

3. Department of Ecology, Environment and Evolution, School of Life Sciences La Trobe University Victoria Melbourne Australia

4. British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council Cambridge United Kingdom

5. Collections & Research, Western Australian Museum Welshpool Western Australian Australia

6. School of Biological Sciences University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australian Australia

7. Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future Western Australian Museum Welshpool Western Australian Australia

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the drivers of evolutionary innovation provides a crucial perspective of how evolutionary processes unfold across taxa and ecological systems. It has been hypothesised that the Southern Ocean provided ecological opportunities for novelty in the past. However, the drivers of innovation are challenging to pinpoint as the evolutionary genetics of Southern Ocean fauna are influenced by Quaternary glacial–interglacial cycles, oceanic currents and species ecology. Here we examined the genome‐wide single nucleotide polymorphisms of the Southern Ocean brittle stars Ophionotus victoriae (five arms, broadcaster) and O. hexactis (six arms, brooder). We found that O. victoriae and O. hexactis are closely‐related species with interspecific gene flow. During the late Pleistocene, O. victoriae likely persisted in a connected deep water refugium and in situ refugia on the Antarctic continental shelf and around Antarctic islands; O. hexactis persisted exclusively within in situ island refugia. Within O. victoriae, contemporary gene flow linking to the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, regional gyres and other local oceanographic regimes was observed. Gene flow connecting West and East Antarctic islands near the Polar Front was also detected in O. hexactis. A strong association was detected between outlier loci and salinity in O. hexactis. Both O. victoriae and O. hexactis are associated with genome‐wide increase in alleles at intermediate‐frequencies; the alleles associated with this peak appear to be species specific, and these intermediate‐frequency variants are far more excessive in O. hexactis. We hypothesise that the peak in alleles at intermediate frequencies could be related to adaptation in the recent past, linked to evolutionary innovations of increase in arm number and a switch to brooding from broadcasting, in O. hexactis.

Funder

Australian Academy of Science

Australian Research Council

University of South Alabama

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference128 articles.

1. Database resources of the National Center for Biotechnology Information

2. Southern Ocean diversity: new paradigms from molecular ecology

3. FastQC: A quality control tool for high throughput sequence data;Andrews S.;Babraham Institute,2010

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