Genomics reveals repeated landlocking of diadromous fish on an isolated island

Author:

Ara Motia G.12ORCID,McCulloch Graham A.1,Dutoit Ludovic1,Wallis Graham P.1ORCID,Ingram Travis1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

2. Department of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography Patuakhali Science and Technology University Patuakhali Bangladesh

Abstract

AbstractLandlocking of diadromous fish in freshwater systems can have significant genomic consequences. For instance, the loss of the migratory life stage can dramatically reduce gene flow across populations, leading to increased genetic structuring and stronger effects of local adaptation. These genomic consequences have been well‐studied in some mainland systems, but the evolutionary impacts of landlocking in island ecosystems are largely unknown. In this study, we used a genotyping‐by‐sequencing (GBS) approach to examine the evolutionary history of landlocking in common smelt (Retropinna retropinna) on Chatham Island, a small isolated oceanic island 800 kilometres east of mainland New Zealand. We examined the relationship between Chatham Island and mainland smelt and used coalescent analyses to test the number and timing of landlocking events on Chatham Island. Our genomic analysis, based on 21,135 SNPs across 169 individuals, revealed that the Chatham Island smelt was genomically distinct from the mainland New Zealand fish, consistent with a single ancestral colonisation event of Chatham Island in the Pleistocene. Significant genetic structure was also evident within the Chatham Island smelt, with a diadromous Chatham Island smelt group, along with three geographically structured landlocked groups. Coalescent demographic analysis supported three independent landlocking events, with this loss of diadromy significantly pre‐dating human colonisation. Our results illustrate how landlocking of diadromous fish can occur repeatedly across a narrow spatial scale, and highlight a unique system to study the genomic basis of repeated adaptation.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference84 articles.

1. Andrews S.(2010).FastQC: A quality control tool for high throughput sequence data.http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc

2. Augspurger J. M.(2017).Early life history of a landlocked amphidromous fish: Migration critical traits and ontogeny[University of Otago New Zealand].https://ourarchive.otago.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10523/7627/AugspurgerJasonM2017PhD.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

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