eLife (Dec 2020)

Ecological adaptation in Atlantic herring is associated with large shifts in allele frequencies at hundreds of loci

  • Fan Han,
  • Minal Jamsandekar,
  • Mats E Pettersson,
  • Leyi Su,
  • Angela P Fuentes-Pardo,
  • Brian W Davis,
  • Dorte Bekkevold,
  • Florian Berg,
  • Michele Casini,
  • Geir Dahle,
  • Edward D Farrell,
  • Arild Folkvord,
  • Leif Andersson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.61076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Atlantic herring is widespread in North Atlantic and adjacent waters and is one of the most abundant vertebrates on earth. This species is well suited to explore genetic adaptation due to minute genetic differentiation at selectively neutral loci. Here, we report hundreds of loci underlying ecological adaptation to different geographic areas and spawning conditions. Four of these represent megabase inversions confirmed by long read sequencing. The genetic architecture underlying ecological adaptation in herring deviates from expectation under a classical infinitesimal model for complex traits because of large shifts in allele frequencies at hundreds of loci under selection.

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