Abstract
Demographic processes can substantially affect a species’ response to
changing ecological conditions, necessitating the combined consideration
of genetic responses to environmental variables and neutral genetic
variation. Using a seascape genomics approach combined with population
demographic modelling, we explored the interplay of demographic and
environmental factors that shaped the current population structure in
Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) along most of the
western Australian coastline. We combined large-scale environmental data
gathered via remote sensing with RADseq genomic data from 138
individuals at 19 sampling sites. Using population genetic and outlier
detection anaylses, we identified three distinct genetic clusters,
coinciding with tropical, subtropical and temperate provincial
bioregions. In contrast to previous studies, our demographic models
indicated that populations occupying the paleo-shoreline split into two
demographically independent lineages before the last glacial maximum
(LGM). A subsequent split after the LGM at 8.5 kya gave rise to the
Shark Bay population, thereby creating the three currently observed
clusters. Although multi-locus heterozygosity declined from north to
south, dolphins from the southernmost cluster inhabiting temperate
waters had higher heterozygosity in potentially adaptive loci, compared
to dolphins from subtropical and tropical waters. These findings suggest
ongoing adaptation to cold temperate waters in the southernmost cluster,
possibly linked to distinct selective pressures between the different
bioregions. Our study demonstrated that in the marine realm, without
apparent physical boundaries, only a combined approach can fully
elucidate the intricate environmental and genetic interactions shaping
the evolutionary trajectory of marine mammals.