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Evaluating the correlation between genome-wide diversity and the release of plastic phenotypic variation in experimental translocations to novel natural environments.

Author(s): Yates MC, Fraser DJ

Phenotypic reaction norms are often shaped and constrained by selection and are important for allowing organisms to respond to environmental change. However, selection cannot constrain reaction norms for environmental conditions that populations have not ex...

Article GUID: 33274531

The relationship between eDNA particle concentration and organism abundance in nature is strengthened by allometric scaling.

Author(s): Yates MC, Glaser D, Post J, Cristescu ME, Fraser DJ, Derry AM

Mol Ecol. 2020 Jul 07;: Authors: Yates MC, Glaser D, Post J, Cristescu ME, Fraser DJ, Derry AM

Article GUID: 32638451

Small population size and low genomic diversity have no effect on fitness in experimental translocations of a wild fish.

Author(s): Yates MC, Bowles E, Fraser DJ

Proc Biol Sci. 2019 Dec 04;286(1916):20191989 Authors: Yates MC, Bowles E, Fraser DJ

Article GUID: 31771476

A critical assessment of estimating census population size from genetic population size (or vice versa) in three fishes.

Author(s): Yates MC, Bernos TA, Fraser DJ

Evol Appl. 2017 10;10(9):935-945 Authors: Yates MC, Bernos TA, Fraser DJ

Article GUID: 29151884


Title:Evaluating the correlation between genome-wide diversity and the release of plastic phenotypic variation in experimental translocations to novel natural environments.
Authors:Yates MCFraser DJ
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33274531
DOI:10.1111/jeb.13747
Category:J Evol Biol
PMID:33274531
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, UQAM, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Group for Interuniversity Research in Limnology and Aquatic Environment (GRIL) at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, Trois-Rivières, QC, Canada.
3 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Evaluating the correlation between genome-wide diversity and the release of plastic phenotypic variation in experimental translocations to novel natural environments.

J Evol Biol. 2020 Dec 03; :

Authors: Yates MC, Fraser DJ

Abstract

Phenotypic reaction norms are often shaped and constrained by selection and are important for allowing organisms to respond to environmental change. However, selection cannot constrain reaction norms for environmental conditions that populations have not experienced. This may allow cryptic neutral genetic variation for the reaction norm to accumulate such that a release of phenotypic variation occurs when it is exposed to novel conditions. Most genomic diversity behaves as if functionally neutral. Genome-wide diversity metrics may therefore correlate with levels of cryptic genetic variation and, as a result, could exhibit a positive relationship with a release of phenotypic variation in novel environments. To test this hypothesis, we conducted translocations of juvenile brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) from 12 populations to novel uninhabited ponds that represented a gradient of environmental conditions. We assessed reaction norms for morphological traits (body size and four morphometric relative warps) across pond environmental gradients and evaluated the effect of genome-wide heterozygosity on phenotypic variability. All traits displayed plastic reaction norms. Overall, we found some evidence that a release of phenotypic variation consistent with cryptic genetic variation can occur in novel environmental conditions. However, the extent to which this release was correlated with average genome-wide diversity was limited to only one of five morphological traits examined. Our results suggest that the link between genomic diversity and the accumulation of cryptic genetic variation in reaction norms may be limited. Similarly, reaction norms were constrained for many of the morphological traits examined. Past conditions may have constrained reaction norms in the putatively novel environments despite significant deviations from contemporary source population habitat. Additionally, as a generalist colonizing species brook trout may exhibit plastic phenotypes across a wide range of environmental conditions.

PMID: 33274531 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]