Seascape genomics of coastal bottlenose dolphins along strong gradients
of temperature and salinity
Abstract
Heterogeneous seascapes and strong environmental gradients in coastal
waters are expected to influence adaptive divergence, particularly in
species with large population sizes where selection is expected to be
highly efficient. However, these influences might also extend to species
characterized by strong social structure, natal philopatry and small
home ranges. We implemented a seascape genomic study to test this
hypothesis in Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus)
distributed along the environmentally heterogeneous coast of southern
Australia. The datasets included oceanographic and environmental
variables thought to be good predictors of local adaptation in dolphins
and 8,081 filtered single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped for
individuals sampled from six different bioregions. From a neutral
perspective, population structure and connectivity of the dolphins were
generally influenced by habitat type and social structuring.
Genotype-environment association analysis identified 241 candidate
adaptive loci and revealed that sea surface temperature and salinity
gradients influenced adaptive divergence in these animals at both large-
(1,000s km) and fine-scales (<100 km). Enrichment analysis and
annotation of candidate genes revealed functions related to
sodium-activated ion transport, kidney development, adipogenesis and
thermogenesis. The findings of spatial adaptive divergence and
inferences of putative physiological adaptations challenge previous
suggestions that marine megafauna is most likely to be affected by
environmental and climatic changes via indirect, trophic effects. Our
work contributes to conservation management of coastal bottlenose
dolphins subjected to anthropogenic disturbance and to efforts of
clarifying how seascape heterogeneity influences adaptive diversity and
evolution in small cetaceans.