Literature DB >> 33613998

Genetic response to human-induced habitat changes in the marine environment: A century of evolution of European sprat in Landvikvannet, Norway.

María Quintela1, Àlex Richter-Boix2, Dorte Bekkevold3, Cecilie Kvamme1, Florian Berg1, Eeva Jansson1, Geir Dahle1, François Besnier1, Richard D M Nash4, Kevin A Glover1,5.   

Abstract

Habitat changes represent one of the five most pervasive threats to biodiversity. However, anthropogenic activities also have the capacity to create novel niche spaces to which species respond differently. In 1880, one such habitat alterations occurred in Landvikvannet, a freshwater lake on the Norwegian coast of Skagerrak, which became brackish after being artificially connected to the sea. This lake is now home to the European sprat, a pelagic marine fish that managed to develop a self-recruiting population in barely few decades. Landvikvannet sprat proved to be genetically isolated from the three main populations described for this species; that is, Norwegian fjords, Baltic Sea, and the combination of North Sea, Kattegat, and Skagerrak. This distinctness was depicted by an accuracy self-assignment of 89% and a highly significant F ST between the lake sprat and each of the remaining samples (average of ≈0.105). The correlation between genetic and environmental variation indicated that salinity could be an important environmental driver of selection (3.3% of the 91 SNPs showed strong associations). Likewise, Isolation by Environment was detected for salinity, although not for temperature, in samples not adhering to an Isolation by Distance pattern. Neighbor-joining tree analysis suggested that the source of the lake sprat is in the Norwegian fjords, rather than in the Baltic Sea despite a similar salinity profile. Strongly drifted allele frequencies and lower genetic diversity in Landvikvannet compared with the Norwegian fjords concur with a founder effect potentially associated with local adaptation to low salinity. Genetic differentiation (F ST) between marine and brackish sprat is larger in the comparison Norway-Landvikvannet than in Norway-Baltic, which suggests that the observed divergence was achieved in Landvikvannet in some 65 generations, that is, 132 years, rather than gradually over thousands of years (the age of the Baltic Sea), thus highlighting the pace at which human-driven evolution can happen.
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  SNP; evolutionary response; habitat alteration; local adaptation; sprat

Year:  2021        PMID: 33613998      PMCID: PMC7882954          DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7160

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2045-7758            Impact factor:   2.912


  2 in total

1.  Geographic variation in gene flow from a genetically distinct migratory ecotype drives population genetic structure of coastal Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.).

Authors:  Bjoerghild Breistein; Geir Dahle; Torild Johansen; Francois Besnier; Maria Quintela; Per Erik Jorde; Halvor Knutsen; Jon-Ivar Westgaard; Kjell Nedreaas; Eva Farestveit; Kevin Alan Glover
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 4.929

2.  Cranial capacity measurement for modern Chinese adults based on 3D reconstruction.

Authors:  Yufeng Qian; Songou Zhang; Qihuan Tan; Jianyu Xia; Guoliang Jin
Journal:  Neurosciences (Riyadh)       Date:  2021-07       Impact factor: 0.906

  2 in total

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