The maintenance of standing genetic variation: gene flow versus
selective neutrality in Atlantic stickleback fish
Abstract
Adaptation to derived habitats often occurs from standing genetic
variation (SGV). The maintenance within ancestral populations of genetic
variants favorable in derived habitats is commonly ascribed to long-term
antagonism between purifying selection and gene flow resulting from
hybridization across habitats. A largely unexplored alternative idea
based on quantitative genetic models of polygenic adaptation is that
variants favored in derived habitats are neutral in ancestral
populations when their frequency is relatively low. To explore the
latter, we first identify genetic variants important to the adaptation
of threespine stickleback fish to a rare derived habitat –
nutrient-depleted acidic lakes – based on whole-genome sequence data.
Sequencing marine stickleback from six locations across the Atlantic
ocean then allows us to infer that the frequency of these derived
variants in the ancestral habitat is unrelated to the likely opportunity
for gene flow of these variants from acidic-adapted populations. This
result is consistent with the selective neutrality of derived variants
within the ancestor. Our study thus supports an underappreciated
explanation for the maintenance of SGV, and calls for a better
understanding of the fitness consequences of adaptive genetic variation
across habitats and genomic backgrounds.