Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Genetic diversity" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Contrasting microbial assembly patterns in the woody endosphere of hybrid and non-hybrid em Populus /em trees Grant KR; Kembel SW; Naik S; Dayanandan S; 41089252
BIOLOGY
2 Macrogenetics reveals multifaceted influences of environmental variation on vertebrate population genetic diversity across the Americas Lawrence ER; Pedersen EJ; Fraser DJ; 37365672
BIOLOGY
3 Decoupled responses of biodiversity facets driven from anuran vulnerability to climate and land-use changes Ceron K; Sales LP; Santana DJ; Pires MM; 36967645
BIOLOGY
4 Neutral and adaptive drivers of genomic change in introduced brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations revealed by pooled sequencing Brookes B; Jeon HB; Derry AM; Post JR; Rogers SM; Humphries S; Fraser DJ; 35154655
BIOLOGY
5 Varying genetic imprints of road networks and human density in North American mammal populations Habrich AK; Lawrence ER; Fraser DJ; 34178111
BIOLOGY
6 Diversity from genes to ecosystems: A unifying framework to study variation across biological metrics and scales. Gaggiotti OE, Chao A, Peres-Neto P, Chiu CH, Edwards C, Fortin MJ, Jost L, Richards CM, Selkoe KA 30026805
BIOLOGY
7 Genetic structure and diversity of indigenous rice (Oryza sativa) varieties in the Eastern Himalayan region of Northeast India. Choudhury B, Khan ML, Dayanandan S 23741655
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Neutral and adaptive drivers of genomic change in introduced brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations revealed by pooled sequencing
Authors:Brookes BJeon HBDerry AMPost JRRogers SMHumphries SFraser DJ
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35154655/
DOI:10.1002/ece3.8584
Publication:Ecology and evolution
Keywords:Salvelinus fontinalisadaptive differentiationgenetic diversityintroduced speciesneutral diversitywhole-genome sequencing
PMID:35154655 Category: Date Added:2022-02-14
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology Concordia University Montréal QC Canada.
2 Département des sciences biologiques Université du Québec à Montréal Montréal QC Canada.
3 Department of Biology University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada.
4 Parks Canada Natural Resource Management Branch Radium Hot Springs BC Canada.

Description:

Understanding the drivers of successful species invasions is important for conserving native biodiversity and for mitigating the economic impacts of introduced species. However, whole-genome resolution investigations of the underlying contributions of neutral and adaptive genetic variation in successful introductions are rare. Increased propagule pressure should result in greater neutral genetic variation, while environmental differences should elicit selective pressures on introduced populations, leading to adaptive differentiation. We investigated neutral and adaptive variation among nine introduced brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations using whole-genome pooled sequencing. The populations inhabit isolated alpine lakes in western Canada and descend from a common source, with an average of ~19 (range of 7-41) generations since introduction. We found some evidence of bottlenecks without recovery, no strong evidence of purifying selection, and little support that varying propagule pressure or differences in local environments shaped observed neutral genetic variation differences. Putative adaptive loci analysis revealed nonconvergent patterns of adaptive differentiation among lakes with minimal putatively adaptive loci (0.001%-0.15%) that did not correspond with tested environmental variables. Our results suggest that (i) introduction success is not always strongly influenced by genetic load; (ii) observed differentiation among introduced populations can be idiosyncratic, population-specific, or stochastic; and (iii) conservatively, in some introduced species, colonization barriers may be overcome by support through one aspect of propagule pressure or benign environmental conditions.





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University