Fish out of water: genomic insights into persistence of rainbowfish populations in the desert.

2021
How populations of aquatic fauna persist in extreme desert environments is an enigma. Individuals often breed and disperse during favourable conditions. Theory predicts that adaptive capacity should be low in small populations, such as in desert fishes. We integrated satellite-derived surface water data and population genomic diversity from 20,294 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across 344 individuals, to understand metapopulation persistence of the desert rainbowfish (Melanotaenia splendida tatei) in central Australia. Desert rainbowfish showed very small effective population sizes, especially at peripheral populations, and low connectivity between river catchments. Yet, there was no evidence of population-level inbreeding and a signal of possible adaptive divergence associated with aridity was detected. Candidate genes for local adaptation included functions related to environmental cues and stressful conditions. Eco-evolutionary modelling showed that positive selection in refugial sub-populations combined with connectivity during flood periods can enable retention of adaptive diversity. Our study suggests that adaptive variation can be maintained in small populations and integrate with neutral metapopulation processes to allow persistence in the desert. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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