Rapid and Repeated Climate Adaptation Involving Chromosome Inversions following Invasion of an Insect

Author:

Ma Li-Jun1,Cao Li-Jun1,Chen Jin-Cui1,Tang Meng-Qing12,Song Wei1,Yang Fang-Yuan1,Shen Xiu-Jing1,Ren Ya-Jing12,Yang Qiong3,Li Hu2,Hoffmann Ary Anthony3ORCID,Wei Shu-Jun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Plant Protection, Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences , Beijing 100097 , China

2. Department of Entomology and MOA Key Lab of Pest Monitoring and Green Management, College of Plant Protection, China Agricultural University , Beijing 100193 , China

3. Bio21 Institute, School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne , Parkville, Victoria 3010 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Following invasion, insects can become adapted to conditions experienced in their invasive range, but there are few studies on the speed of adaptation and its genomic basis. Here, we examine a small insect pest, Thrips palmi, following its contemporary range expansion across a sharp climate gradient from the subtropics to temperate areas. We first found a geographically associated population genetic structure and inferred a stepping-stone dispersal pattern in this pest from the open fields of southern China to greenhouse environments of northern regions, with limited gene flow after colonization. In common garden experiments, both the field and greenhouse groups exhibited clinal patterns in thermal tolerance as measured by critical thermal maximum (CTmax) closely linked with latitude and temperature variables. A selection experiment reinforced the evolutionary potential of CTmax with an estimated h2 of 6.8% for the trait. We identified 3 inversions in the genome that were closely associated with CTmax, accounting for 49.9%, 19.6%, and 8.6% of the variance in CTmax among populations. Other genomic variations in CTmax outside the inversion region were specific to certain populations but functionally conserved. These findings highlight rapid adaptation to CTmax in both open field and greenhouse populations and reiterate the importance of inversions behaving as large-effect alleles in climate adaptation.

Funder

Beijing Natural Science Foundation

Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences

Joint Laboratory of Pest Control Research Between China and Australia

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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