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Deep structure, long-distance migration and admixture in the colour polymorphic land snail Cepaea nemoralis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on Cepaea snails has been limited by a lack of genomic data and understanding of the genetics behind their color variations.
  • A study used phylogenomic methods and combined mitochondrial DNA with genomic data from over 1500 snails, revealing distinct populations across Europe influenced by both selection and genetic drift.
  • Findings suggest that current snails in Ireland likely descended from a mix of populations from the Pyrenees and Central Europe, offering a foundation for future genetic studies on color polymorphism in this species.

Article Abstract

Although snails of the genus Cepaea have historically been important in studying colour polymorphism, an ongoing issue is that there is a lack of knowledge of the underlying genetics of the polymorphism, as well as an absence of genomic data to put findings in context. We, therefore, used phylogenomic methods to begin to investigate the post-glacial history of Cepaea nemoralis, with a long-term aim to understand the roles that selection and drift have in determining both European-wide and local patterns of colour polymorphism. By combining prior and new mitochondrial DNA data from over 1500 individuals with ddRAD genomic data from representative individuals across Europe, we show that patterns of differentiation are primarily due to multiple deeply diverged populations of snails. Minimally, there is a widespread Central European population and additional diverged groups in Northern Spain, the Pyrenees, as well as likely Italy and South Eastern Europe. The genomic analysis showed that the present-day snails in Ireland and possibly some other locations are likely descendants of admixture between snails from the Pyrenees and the Central European group, an observation that is consistent with prior inferences from mitochondrial DNA alone. The interpretation is that C. nemoralis may have arrived in Ireland via long-distance migration from the Pyrenean region, subsequently admixing with arrivals from elsewhere. This work, therefore, provides a baseline expectation for future studies on the genetics of the colour polymorphism, as well as providing a comparator for similar species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9541890PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jeb.14060DOI Listing

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