Experimental introductions of species have provided some of the most tractable examples of rapid phenotypic changes, which may reflect plasticity, the impact of stochastic processes, or the action of natural selection. Yet to date, very few studies have investigated the neutral and potentially adaptive genetic impacts of experimental introductions. We dissect the role of these processes in shaping the population differentiation of wall lizards in three Croatian islands (Sušac, Pod Kopište, and Pod Mrčaru), including the islet of Pod Mrčaru, where experimentally introduced lizards underwent rapid (~30 generations) phenotypic changes associated with a shift from an insectivorous to a plant-based diet. Using a genomic approach (~82,000 ddRAD loci), we confirmed a founder effect during introduction and very low neutral genetic differentiation between the introduced population and its source. However, genetic depletion did not prevent rapid population growth, as the introduced lizards exhibited population genetic signals of expansion and are known to have reached a high density. Our genome-scan analysis identified just a handful of loci showing large allelic shifts between ecologically divergent populations. This low overall signal of selection suggests that the extreme phenotypic differences observed among populations are determined by a small number of large-effect loci and/or that phenotypic plasticity plays a major role in phenotypic changes. Nonetheless, functional annotation of the outlier loci revealed some candidate genes relevant to diet-induced adaptation, in agreement with the hypothesis of directional selection. Our study provides important insights on the evolutionary potential of bottlenecked populations in response to new selective pressures on short ecological timescales.

Genetic depletion does not prevent rapid evolution in island-introduced lizards / S. Sherpa, J.R. Paris, I. Silva-Rocha, V. Di Canio, M.A. Carretero, G.F. Ficetola, D. Salvi. - In: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION. - ISSN 2045-7758. - 13:11(2023 Nov), pp. e10721.1-e10721.15. [10.1002/ece3.10721]

Genetic depletion does not prevent rapid evolution in island-introduced lizards

S. Sherpa
Primo
;
G.F. Ficetola
;
2023

Abstract

Experimental introductions of species have provided some of the most tractable examples of rapid phenotypic changes, which may reflect plasticity, the impact of stochastic processes, or the action of natural selection. Yet to date, very few studies have investigated the neutral and potentially adaptive genetic impacts of experimental introductions. We dissect the role of these processes in shaping the population differentiation of wall lizards in three Croatian islands (Sušac, Pod Kopište, and Pod Mrčaru), including the islet of Pod Mrčaru, where experimentally introduced lizards underwent rapid (~30 generations) phenotypic changes associated with a shift from an insectivorous to a plant-based diet. Using a genomic approach (~82,000 ddRAD loci), we confirmed a founder effect during introduction and very low neutral genetic differentiation between the introduced population and its source. However, genetic depletion did not prevent rapid population growth, as the introduced lizards exhibited population genetic signals of expansion and are known to have reached a high density. Our genome-scan analysis identified just a handful of loci showing large allelic shifts between ecologically divergent populations. This low overall signal of selection suggests that the extreme phenotypic differences observed among populations are determined by a small number of large-effect loci and/or that phenotypic plasticity plays a major role in phenotypic changes. Nonetheless, functional annotation of the outlier loci revealed some candidate genes relevant to diet-induced adaptation, in agreement with the hypothesis of directional selection. Our study provides important insights on the evolutionary potential of bottlenecked populations in response to new selective pressures on short ecological timescales.
English
Podarcis siculus; experimental introduction; founder effect; island; population genomics; rapid adaptation
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Settore BIO/18 - Genetica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
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   MINISTERO DELL'ISTRUZIONE E DEL MERITO
   2017KLZ3MA_004

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   EndeNiche
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
   20224FFACB_001
nov-2023
27-nov-2023
Wiley
13
11
e10721
1
15
15
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Genetic depletion does not prevent rapid evolution in island-introduced lizards / S. Sherpa, J.R. Paris, I. Silva-Rocha, V. Di Canio, M.A. Carretero, G.F. Ficetola, D. Salvi. - In: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION. - ISSN 2045-7758. - 13:11(2023 Nov), pp. e10721.1-e10721.15. [10.1002/ece3.10721]
open
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262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
S. Sherpa, J.R. Paris, I. Silva-Rocha, V. Di Canio, M.A. Carretero, G.F. Ficetola, D. Salvi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1022410
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