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Vive la Résistance: Genome-wide Selection Against Introduced Alleles in Invasive Hybrid Zones

May 30, 2017

Abstract

Evolutionary and ecological consequences of hybridization between native and invasive species are notoriously complicated because patterns of selection acting on non-native alleles can vary throughout the genome and across environments. Rapid advances in genomics now make it feasible to assess locus-specific and genome-wide patterns of natural selection acting on invasive introgression within and among natural populations occupying diverse environments. We quantified genome-wide patterns of admixture across multiple independent hybrid zones of native Westslope Cutthroat Trout and invasive rainbow trout, the world’s most widely introduced fish, by genotyping 339 individuals from 21 populations using 9380 species-diagnostic loci. A significantly greater proportion of the genome appeared to be under selection favouring native Cutthroat Trout (rather than Rainbow Trout), and this pattern was pervasive across the genome (detected on most chromosomes). Furthermore, selection against invasive alleles was consistent across populations and environments, even in those where Rainbow Trout were predicted to have a selective advantage (warm environments). These data corroborate field studies showing that hybrids between these species have lower fitness than the native taxa, and show that these fitness differences are due to selection favouring many native genes distributed widely throughout the genome.

Authors

Ryan Kovach, Brian Hand, Paul Hohenlohe, Ted Cosart, Matthew Boyer, Helen Neville, Clint Muhlfeld, Stephen Amish, Kellie Carim, Shawn Narum, Winsor Lowe, Fred Allendorf, and Gordon Luikart

Citation

Kovach, R.P.,  B.K. Hand, P.A. Hohenlohe, T.F. Cosart, M.C. Boyer, H.H. Neville, C.C. Muhlfeld, S.J. Amish, K. Carim, S.R. Narum, W.H. Lowe, F.W. Allendorf, and G. Luikart. 2016. Vive la résistance: genome-wide selection against introduced alleles in invasive hybrid zones. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 283(1843):20161380. Online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2016.1380.

Date

2016/10/25

Report No.

JournalPost_Kovach_etal2016

Media Type

Journal Article