2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.02.027
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Ancient and modern stickleback genomes reveal the demographic constraints on adaptation

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Cited by 38 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…When these glaciers melted, anadromous marine stickleback colonized freshwater to establish the permanent lake populations we study today. Using modern marine fish as a proxy for those ancestral founders (Kirch et al 2021), we are confident that those colonists were highly susceptible to S.solidus infection (high infection success rate, fast cestode growth). Although they possess the ancient genetic pathways to initiate peritoneal fibrosis (Vrtílek and Bolnick 2021), they do not do so in response to cestode infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When these glaciers melted, anadromous marine stickleback colonized freshwater to establish the permanent lake populations we study today. Using modern marine fish as a proxy for those ancestral founders (Kirch et al 2021), we are confident that those colonists were highly susceptible to S.solidus infection (high infection success rate, fast cestode growth). Although they possess the ancient genetic pathways to initiate peritoneal fibrosis (Vrtílek and Bolnick 2021), they do not do so in response to cestode infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1a) are a useful vertebrate species for understanding the impact of adaptation on range dynamics under climate change. In particular, the availability of a regionally downscaled climate model for the Pacific Northwest (Alexander et al, 2018; IPCC, 2014; Reynolds et al, 2007) make panmictic marine populations of G. aculeatus in the eastern Pacific Ocean (Kirch, Romundset, Gilbert, Jones, & Foote, 2021; Morris et al, 2018) an ideal system for testing how adaptive trait variation could affect projections of species range distributions under climate change (Barrett & Hendry, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also feasible to artificially breed multiple hybrid generations in common garden lab environments. Moreover, there is a regionally downscaled climate model for the Pacific Northwest (Alexander et al, 2018; IPCC, 2014; Reynolds et al, 2007), which makes panmictic marine populations of G. aculeatus in the eastern Pacific Ocean (Kirch et al, 2021; Morris et al, 2018) an ideal system for testing how adaptive trait variation could affect projections of species range under climate change.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A further insight into marine stickleback is that with both the random and neutral SNPs, the freshwater populations from North Uist appear genetically no more similar to marine fish sampled in immediate (ARDH, OBSM) or relative (IR) proximity than to the samples from the much more distant marine locations. This implies that at the genome-wide level, any Atlantic marine sampleirrespective of its precise geographic origin (and including off-shore samples like IR; Table S1) -serves as an adequate representation of ancestral Atlantic marine stickleback (see also Kirch et al 2021).…”
Section: Population Structurementioning
confidence: 99%