Environmental heterogeneity promotes microgeographic genetic divergence in the Mediterranean killifish Aphanius fasciatus (Cyprinodontidae)

2017 
Environmental stress can promote evolutionary forces and genetic divergence, but at which microgeographic scale divergence may arise, even in the presence of gene flow, remains poorly known. We studied the effects of eutrophication in a saltwork over a period of 6 years on the gene pool of a local population of the Mediterranean killifish Aphanius fasciatus, a species resistant to extreme conditions. We hypothesised that during eutrophication, the environmental stress may have acted differently along a gradient of salinity and oxygen concentration in promoting evolutionary forces, generating divergence over a small spatial scale (2 km), despite gene flow. We analysed 24 allozymes in three temporal samples each composed of four spatial sub-samples, collected along the gradient, during eutrophication (2003 and 2005) and after a recovery project (2008). The results suggest that eutrophication promoted natural selection, originating a genetic cline on one locus (adenosine deaminase) significantly linked to sa...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    71
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map