Selection against domestication alleles in introduced rabbit populations.

Pedro Andrade,Joel M Alves, Paulo Pereira, Carl-Johan Rubin, Eugénio Silva,C Grace Sprehn,Erik Enbody,Sandra Afonso, Rui Faria, Yexin Zhang, Never Bonino,Janine A Duckworth, Hervé Garreau, Mike Letnic,Tanja Strive, Carl-Gustaf Thulin,Guillaume Queney, Rafael Villafuerte, Francis M Jiggins,Nuno Ferrand,Leif Andersson,Miguel Carneiro

Nature ecology & evolution(2024)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Humans have moved domestic animals around the globe for thousands of years. These have occasionally established feral populations in nature, often with devastating ecological consequences. To understand how natural selection shapes re-adaptation into the wild, we investigated one of the most successful colonizers in history, the European rabbit. By sequencing the genomes of 297 rabbits across three continents, we show that introduced populations exhibit a mixed wild-domestic ancestry. We show that alleles that increased in frequency during domestication were preferentially selected against in novel natural environments. Interestingly, causative mutations for common domestication traits sometimes segregate at considerable frequencies if associated with less drastic phenotypes (for example, coat colour dilution), whereas mutations that are probably strongly maladaptive in nature are absent. Whereas natural selection largely targeted different genomic regions in each introduced population, some of the strongest signals of parallelism overlap genes associated with neuronal or brain function. This limited parallelism is probably explained by extensive standing genetic variation resulting from domestication together with the complex mixed ancestry of introduced populations. Our findings shed light on the selective and molecular mechanisms that enable domestic animals to re-adapt to the wild and provide important insights for the mitigation and management of invasive populations.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要