Abstract
AbstractTheory predicts that compensatory genetic changes reduce negative indirect effects of selected variants during adaptive evolution, but evidence is scarce. Here, we test this in a wild population of Hawaiian crickets using temporal genomics and a high-quality chromosome-level cricket genome. In this population, a mutation, flatwing, silences males and rapidly spread due to an acoustically-orienting parasitoid. Our sampling spanned a social transition during which flatwing fixed and the population went silent. We find long-range linkage disequilibrium around the putative flatwing locus was maintained over time, and hitchhiking genes had functions related to negative flatwing-associated effects. We develop a combinatorial enrichment approach using transcriptome data to test for compensatory, intragenomic coevolution. Temporal changes in genomic selection were distributed genome-wide and functionally associated with the population’s transition to silence, particularly behavioural responses to silent environments. Our results demonstrate how ‘adaptation begets adaptation’; changes to the sociogenetic environment accompanying rapid trait evolution can generate selection provoking further, compensatory adaptation.
Funder
RCUK | Natural Environment Research Council
RCUK | Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Wellcome Trust
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference153 articles.
1. Futuyma, D. J. Ernst Mayr and evolutionary biology. Evolution 48, 36–43 (1994).
2. Mayr, E. Evolution as a Process Ch.11 (Allen & Unwin, London, 1954).
3. Williams, G. C. Adaptation and Natural Selection: A Critique of Some Current Evolutionary Thought (Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, 1996).
4. Dobzhansky, T. Observations and experiments on natural selection in Drosophila. Hereditas 35, 210–224 (1949).
5. Fisher, R. A. The possible modification of the response of the wild type to recurrent mutations. Am. Nat. 62, 115–126 (1928).
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献