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Climate-induced range shifts drive adaptive response via spatio-temporal sieving of alleles

Hirzi Luqman, Daniel Wegmann, Simone Fior, Alex Widmer

2023Nature Communications34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Quaternary climate fluctuations drove many species to shift their geographic ranges, in turn shaping their genetic structures. Recently, it has been argued that adaptation may have accompanied species range shifts via the "sieving" of genotypes during colonisation and establishment. However, this has not been directly demonstrated, and knowledge remains limited on how different evolutionary forces, which are typically investigated separately, interacted to jointly mediate species responses to past climatic change. Here, through whole-genome re-sequencing of over 1200 individuals of the carnation Dianthus sylvestris coupled with integrated population genomic and gene-environment models, we reconstruct the past neutral and adaptive landscape of this species as it was shaped by the Quaternary glacial cycles. We show that adaptive responses emerged concomitantly with the post-glacial range shifts and expansions of this species in the last 20 thousand years. This was due to the heterogenous sieving of adaptive alleles across space and time, as populations expanded out of restrictive glacial refugia into the broader and more heterogeneous range of habitats available in the present-day inter-glacial. Our findings reveal a tightly-linked interplay of migration and adaptation under past climate-induced range shifts, which we show is key to understanding the spatial patterns of adaptive variation we see in species today.

Topics & Concepts

Adaptation (eye)Glacial periodRange (aeronautics)BiologyLocal adaptationClimate changeEvolutionary biologyEcologyLast Glacial MaximumColonisationPopulationQuaternaryPaleontologyColonizationDemographyNeuroscienceComposite materialSociologyMaterials scienceSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeGenetic diversity and population structurePlant and animal studies
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