Journal
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES
Volume 21, Issue 8, Pages 2766-2781Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.13495
Keywords
artificial intelligence; community ecology; ecological genetics; gradient boosting models; landscape genetics; random forest
Funding
- Australian Research Council [DP190102020]
- Division of Environmental Biology [DEB 1413925]
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MrIML is a new R package that provides a powerful and interpretable framework for quantifying genomic relationships, identifying loci of interest, and gaining new insights into adaptation. This package helps address challenges in traditional landscape genetic approaches and has broad functionality for recovering landscape relationships and analyzing empirical data. It has the potential to transform the modeling of thousands of loci and environmental drivers in various contexts beyond genetic variation.
We introduce a new R package MrIML (Mister iml; Multi-response Interpretable Machine Learning). MrIML provides a powerful and interpretable framework that enables users to harness recent advances in machine learning to quantify multilocus genomic relationships, to identify loci of interest for future landscape genetics studies, and to gain new insights into adaptation across environmental gradients. Relationships between genetic variation and environment are often nonlinear and interactive; these characteristics have been challenging to address using traditional landscape genetic approaches. Our package helps capture this complexity and offers functions that fit and interpret a wide range of highly flexible models that are routinely used for single-locus landscape genetics studies but are rarely extended to estimate response functions for multiple loci. To demonstrate the package's broad functionality, we test its ability to recover landscape relationships from simulated genomic data. We also apply the package to two empirical case studies. In the first, we model genetic variation of North American balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera, Salicaceae) populations across environmental gradients. In the second case study, we recover the landscape and host drivers of feline immunodeficiency virus genetic variation in bobcats (Lynx rufus). The ability to model thousands of loci collectively and compare models from linear regression to extreme gradient boosting, within the same analytical framework, has the potential to be transformative. The MrIML framework is also extendable and not limited to modelling genetic variation; for example, it can quantify the environmental drivers of microbiomes and coinfection dynamics.
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