Local adaptation despite gene flow in copepod populations across
salinity and temperature gradients in the Baltic and North Seas
Abstract
Global climate change is threatening aquatic organisms with rapid
changes in habitat salinity and temperature. In response to such
changing conditions, adaptation could rescue populations from
extinction. Gene flow is a key factor that could either promote or
hinder local adaptation, with either beneficial or maladapted alleles
immigrating from elsewhere. This interplay between local adaptation and
gene flow has not been fully explored in passive dispersers, such as
plankton. Thus, we investigated patterns of gene flow and genomic
signatures of local adaptation in populations of the copepod Eurytemora
affinis spanning natural salinity and temperature gradients in the
Baltic and North Seas. Based on whole-genome sequencing of 11
populations, we found population genomic signatures of selection
associated with salinity and temperature gradients in both seas,
indicating local adaptation, with ‘ion transmembrane transport’ as the
most enriched gene ontology category under selection. Interestingly, the
single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with responses to
salinity and temperature were uncorrelated. We found clear population
structure between the Baltic and North Seas, along with signals of
admixture between populations, consistent with the presence of gene flow
both within and between the seas. Our results suggest that gene flow of
beneficial alleles from across the environmental gradients could provide
the genetic substrate for populations to adapt to future climate change.