AI Article Synopsis

  • Studying repeated adaptation helps us understand how species like dolphins can adjust to different environments over time.
  • The research focuses on the common bottlenose dolphin, examining how distinct groups in coastal and pelagic habitats have evolved separately across the world.
  • An analysis of 57 dolphin genomes reveals that adaptations occurred through a complex history of evolution, highlighting how ancient genetic variations played a role in these adaptations despite challenges like small population sizes.

Article Abstract

Studying repeated adaptation can provide insights into the mechanisms allowing species to adapt to novel environments. Here, we investigate repeated evolution driven by habitat specialization in the common bottlenose dolphin. Parapatric pelagic and coastal ecotypes of common bottlenose dolphins have repeatedly formed across the oceans. Analyzing whole genomes of 57 individuals, we find that ecotype evolution involved a complex reticulated evolutionary history. We find parallel linked selection acted upon ancient alleles in geographically distant coastal populations, which were present as standing genetic variation in the pelagic populations. Candidate loci evolving under parallel linked selection were found in ancient tracts, suggesting recurrent bouts of selection through time. Therefore, despite the constraints of small effective population size and long generation time on the efficacy of selection, repeated adaptation in long-lived social species can be driven by a combination of ecological opportunities and selection acting on ancestral standing genetic variation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8550227PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abg1245DOI Listing

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