Genetic load has potential in large populations but is realized in small
populations
Abstract
Populations with higher genetic diversity and larger effective sizes
have greater evolutionary capacity (i.e., higher adaptive potential) to
respond to ecological stressors. We are interested in how the adaptive
potential captured in protein-coding genes persists in small populations
and how it fluctuates relative to overall genomic diversity. We analyzed
individual whole genome sequences from different populations of
Montezuma Quail (Cyrtonyx montezumae), a small ground-dwelling bird that
is sustainably harvested in some portions of its range but is of
conservation concern elsewhere. Our historical demographic results
indicate that overall, Montezuma Quail populations in the U.S. exhibit
low levels of genomic diversity due in large part to long-term declines
in effective population sizes over nearly a million years. The smaller
and more isolated Texas population is significantly more inbred than the
large Arizona and the intermediate-sized New Mexico populations. The
Texas gene pool has a significantly lower proportion of deleterious
alleles than the Arizona gene pool, but also significantly more
high-frequency deleterious alleles that, coupled with elevated
inbreeding, elevate the realized genetic load in Texas. Our results
highlight that although small, isolated populations can maintain
adaptive potential (i.e., genic diversity can still be high), they are
at higher risk of inbreeding depression as detrimental mutations rise in
frequency due to drift and weakened purifying selection. Our study
illustrates how population genomics can be used to proactively assess
both neutral and adaptive aspects of contemporary genetic diversity in a
conservation framework while simultaneously considering deeper
demographic histories.