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Resolving the genetic paradox of invasions: Preadapted genomes and postintroduction hybridization of bigheaded carps in the Mississippi River Basin. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the genetic complexities behind the invasion of bighead and silver carp in the Mississippi River Basin, focusing on hybridization and genetic adaptation.
  • It involved sequencing the genomes of these carps and their hybrids, revealing high genetic diversity and genomic similarities between the species, along with traits linked to environmental adaptation.
  • The findings suggest that the carp's unique genetic features facilitated their initial invasion, while hybridization helped them expand their range, presenting a new perspective on the genetic paradox of biological invasions.

Article Abstract

The genetic paradox of biological invasions is complex and multifaceted. In particular, the relative role of disparate propagule sources and genetic adaptation through postintroduction hybridization has remained largely unexplored. To add resolution to this paradox, we investigate the genetic architecture responsible for the invasion of two invasive Asian carp species, bighead carp () and silver carp () (bigheaded carps) that experience extensive hybridization in the Mississippi River Basin (MRB). We sequenced the genomes of bighead and silver carps (~1.08G bp and ~1.15G bp, respectively) and their hybrids collected from the MRB. We found moderate-to-high heterozygosity in bighead (0.0021) and silver (0.0036) carps, detected significantly higher dN/dS ratios of single-copy orthologous genes in bigheaded carps versus 10 other species of fish, and identified genes in both species potentially associated with environmental adaptation and other invasion-related traits. Additionally, we observed a high genomic similarity (96.3% in all syntenic blocks) between bighead and silver carps and over 90% embryonic viability in their experimentally induced hybrids. Our results suggest intrinsic genomic features of bigheaded carps, likely associated with life history traits that presumably evolved within their native ranges, might have facilitated their initial establishment of invasion, whereas interspecific hybridization between the carps might have promoted their range expansion. This study reveals an alternative mechanism that could resolve one of the genetic paradoxes in biological invasions and provides invaluable genomic resources for applied research involving bigheaded carps.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6976960PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12863DOI Listing

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