4.6 Article

Genome-wide diversity and habitat underlie fine-scale phenotypic differentiation in the rainbow darter (Etheostoma caeruleum)

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 498-512

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.13135

Keywords

adaptive potential; Etheostomacaeruleum; genetic diversity; morphology; RADseq; thermal tolerance

Funding

  1. Michigan State University
  2. National Science Foundation [DBI1460569, DBI-1757530, FSML-1722621]

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Genetic diversity is crucial for a species to adapt and withstand environmental pressures, with studies showing that sites with higher genetic variation are better equipped to handle stress. For species with limited dispersal, fragmented populations, and reduced genetic diversity, the lack of adaptive variation may lead to a higher risk of local extinction.
Adaptation to environmental change requires that populations harbor the necessary genetic variation to respond to selection. However, dispersal-limited species with fragmented populations and reduced genetic diversity may lack this variation and are at an increased risk of local extinction. In freshwater fish species, environmental change in the form of increased stream temperatures places many cold-water species at-risk. We present a study of rainbow darters (Etheostoma caeruleum) in which we evaluated the importance of genetic variation on adaptive potential and determined responses to extreme thermal stress. We compared fine-scale patterns of morphological and thermal tolerance differentiation across eight sites, including a unique lake habitat. We also inferred contemporary population structure using genomic data and characterized the relationship between individual genetic diversity and stress tolerance. We found site-specific variation in thermal tolerance that generally matched local conditions and morphological differences associated with lake-stream divergence. We detected patterns of population structure on a highly local spatial scale that could not be explained by isolation by distance or stream connectivity. Finally, we showed that individual thermal tolerance was positively correlated with genetic variation, suggesting that sites with increased genetic diversity may be better at tolerating novel stress. Our results highlight the importance of considering intraspecific variation in understanding population vulnerability and stress response.

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