Article, 2024

Plastic and genomic change of a newly established lizard population following a founder event

Molecular Ecology, ISSN 0962-1083, 1365-294X, Volume 33, 10, 10.1111/mec.17255

Contributors

Sabolic I. [1] Mira O. [1] Brandt D.Y.C. 0000-0002-9565-7835 [2] Lisicic D. [1] Stapley J. [3] Novosolov M. 0000-0002-4034-3441 [4] Bakaric R. [1] Cizelj I. Glogoski M. [1] Hudina T. Taverne M. [5] Allentoft M.E. 0000-0003-4424-3568 [4] [6] Nielsen R. 0000-0003-0513-6591 [2] Herrel A. 0000-0003-0991-4434 [5] [7] [8] [9] Stambuk A. 0000-0002-3177-7694 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Zagreb
  2. [NORA names: Croatia; Europe, EU];
  3. [2] University of California
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  5. [3] ETH Zurich
  6. [NORA names: Switzerland; Europe, Non-EU; OECD];
  7. [4] University of Copenhagen
  8. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  9. [5] CNRS
  10. [NORA names: France; Europe, EU; OECD];

Abstract

Understanding how phenotypic divergence arises among natural populations remains one of the major goals in evolutionary biology. As part of competitive exclusion experiment conducted in 1971, 10 individuals of Italian wall lizard (Podarcis siculus (Rafinesque-Schmaltz, 1810)) were transplanted from Pod Kopište Island to the nearby island of Pod Mrčaru (Adriatic Sea). Merely 35 years after the introduction, the newly established population on Pod Mrčaru Island had shifted their diet from predominantly insectivorous towards omnivorous and changed significantly in a range of morphological, behavioural, physiological and ecological characteristics. Here, we combine genomic and quantitative genetic approaches to determine the relative roles of genetic adaptation and phenotypic plasticity in driving this rapid phenotypic shift. Our results show genome-wide genetic differentiation between ancestral and transplanted population, with weak genetic erosion on Pod Mrčaru Island. Adaptive processes following the founder event are indicated by highly differentiated genomic loci associating with ecologically relevant phenotypic traits, and/or having a putatively adaptive role across multiple lizard populations. Diverged traits related to head size and shape or bite force showed moderate heritability in a crossing experiment, but between-population differences in these traits did not persist in a common garden environment. Our results confirm the existence of sufficient additive genetic variance for traits to evolve under selection while also demonstrating that phenotypic plasticity and/or genotype by environment interactions are the main drivers of population differentiation at this early evolutionary stage.

Keywords

bottleneck, heritability, invasive success, phenotypic plasticity, population crossing experiment, rapid evolution

Funders

  • National Geographic Committee for Research and Exploration
  • European Commission
  • European Social Fund
  • Hrvatska Zaklada za Znanost

Data Provider: Elsevier