4.7 Article

Whole genome population structure of North Atlantic kelp confirms high-latitude glacial refugia

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 24, Pages 6473-6488

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16714

Keywords

Alaria esculenta; brown algae; Last Glacial Maximum; Phaeophyceae; population genomics; whole genome sequencing

Funding

  1. ArcticNet [P101 ArcticKelp]
  2. Det Frie Forskningsrad [8021-00222 B]
  3. European Union Northern Periphery and Arctic Programme [SW-GROW]
  4. Norwegian Research Council [DE1901006192]
  5. SFI Frontiers for the Future project Pristine Coasts [19/FFP/6841]

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This study used genome sequencing to investigate the survival of kelp populations during the Last Glacial Maximum. The results provide strong evidence that these populations were resilient to past climatic fluctuations and potentially adapted to local conditions.
Coastal refugia during the Last Glacial Maximum (similar to 21,000years ago) have been hypothesized at high latitudes in the North Atlantic, suggesting marine populations persisted through cycles of glaciation and are potentially adapted to local environments. Here, whole-genome sequencing was used to test whether North Atlantic marine coastal populations of the kelp Maria esculenta survived in the area of southwestern Greenland during the Last Glacial Maximum. We present the first annotated genome for A. esculenta and call variant positions in 54 individuals from populations in Atlantic Canada, Greenland, Faroe Islands, Norway and Ireland. Differentiation across populations was reflected in similar to 1.9 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, which further revealed mixed ancestry in the Faroe Islands individuals between putative Greenlandic and European lineages. Time-calibrated organellar phylogenies suggested Greenlandic populations were established during the last interglacial period more than 100,000years ago, and that the Faroe Islands population was probably established following the Last Glacial Maximum. Patterns in population statistics, including nucleotide diversity, minor allele frequencies, heterozygosity and linkage disequilibrium decay, nonetheless suggested glaciation reduced Canadian Atlantic and Greenlandic populations to small effective sizes during the most recent glaciation. Functional differentiation was further reflected in exon read coverage, which revealed expansions unique to Greenland in 337 exons representing 162 genes, and a modest degree of exon loss (103 exons from 56 genes). Altogether, our genomic results provide strong evidence that A. escutenta populations were resilient to past climatic fluctuations related to glaciations and that high-latitude populations are potentially already adapted to local conditions as a result.

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