Small populations lose overall genomic diversity but can maintain
adaptive potential
Abstract
In principle, populations with higher genetic diversity and larger
effective sizes have greater evolutionary capacity (i.e., higher
adaptive potential) to respond to ecological stressors. Small isolated
populations tend to lose genetic diversity rapidly due to the
detrimental effects of drift and inbreeding via genetic erosion. We are
interested in how adaptive potential 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 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 smaller,
isolated populations 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.