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DOI10.1038/s41559-019-0914-2
Historical contingency shapes adaptive radiation in Antarctic fishes
Daane, Jacob M.1; Dornburg, Alex2; Smits, Patrick3; MacGuigan, Daniel J.4; Hawkins, M. Brent3,5,6; Near, Thomas J.4,7; Detrich, H. William, III1; Harris, Matthew P.3,6
发表日期2019
ISSN2397-334X
卷号3期号:7页码:1102-1109
英文摘要

Adaptive radiation illustrates links between ecological opportunity, natural selection and the generation of biodiversity. Central to adaptive radiation is the association between a diversifying lineage and the evolution of phenotypic variation that facilitates the use of new environments or resources. However, is not clear whether adaptive evolution or historical contingency is more important for the origin of key phenotypic traits in adaptive radiation. Here we use targeted sequencing of >250,000 loci across 46 species to examine hypotheses concerning the origin and diversification of key traits in the adaptive radiation of Antarctic notothenioid fishes. Contrary to expectations of adaptive evolution, we show that notothenioids experienced a punctuated burst of genomic diversification and evolved key skeletal modifications before the onset of polar conditions in the Southern Ocean. We show that diversifying selection in pathways associated with human skeletal dysplasias facilitates ecologically important variation in buoyancy among Antarctic notothenioid species, and demonstrate the sufficiency of altered trip11, col1a2 and col1a1a function in zebrafish (Danio rerio) to phenocopy skeletal reduction in Antarctic notothenioids. Rather than adaptation being driven by the cooling of the Antarctic, our results highlight the role of historical contingency in shaping the adaptive radiation of notothenioids. Understanding the historical and environmental context for the origin of key traits in adaptive radiations extends beyond reconstructing events that result in evolutionary innovation, as it also provides a context in forecasting the effects of climate change on the stability and evolvability of natural populations.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Evolutionary Biology
来源期刊NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/99591
作者单位1.Northeastern Univ, Ctr Marine Sci, Dept Marine & Environm Sci, Nahant, MA 01908 USA;
2.North Carolina Museum Nat Sci, Raleigh, NC USA;
3.Boston Childrens Hosp, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Orthopaed Res Labs, Boston, MA 02115 USA;
4.Yale Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, New Haven, CT USA;
5.Harvard Univ, Museum Comparat Zool, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA;
6.Harvard Med Sch, Dept Genet, Boston, MA 02115 USA;
7.Yale Univ, Peabody Museum Nat Hist, New Haven, CT USA
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GB/T 7714
Daane, Jacob M.,Dornburg, Alex,Smits, Patrick,et al. Historical contingency shapes adaptive radiation in Antarctic fishes[J],2019,3(7):1102-1109.
APA Daane, Jacob M..,Dornburg, Alex.,Smits, Patrick.,MacGuigan, Daniel J..,Hawkins, M. Brent.,...&Harris, Matthew P..(2019).Historical contingency shapes adaptive radiation in Antarctic fishes.NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION,3(7),1102-1109.
MLA Daane, Jacob M.,et al."Historical contingency shapes adaptive radiation in Antarctic fishes".NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION 3.7(2019):1102-1109.
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