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Long‐term balancing selection on chromosomal variants associated with crypsis in a stick insect
Author(s) -
Lindtke Dorothea,
Lucek Kay,
SoriaCarrasco Víctor,
Villoutreix Romain,
Farkas Timothy E.,
Riesch Rüdiger,
Dennis Stuart R.,
Gompert Zach,
Nosil Patrik
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
molecular ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.619
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1365-294X
pISSN - 0962-1083
DOI - 10.1111/mec.14280
Subject(s) - biology , crypsis , selection (genetic algorithm) , balancing selection , term (time) , evolutionary biology , insect , melanism , genetics , ecology , genetic variation , gene , predation , artificial intelligence , computer science , physics , quantum mechanics
How polymorphisms are maintained within populations over long periods of time remains debated, because genetic drift and various forms of selection are expected to reduce variation. Here, we study the genetic architecture and maintenance of phenotypic morphs that confer crypsis in Timema cristinae stick insects, combining phenotypic information and genotyping‐by‐sequencing data from 1,360 samples across 21 populations. We find two highly divergent chromosomal variants that span megabases of sequence and are associated with colour polymorphism. We show that these variants exhibit strongly reduced effective recombination, are geographically widespread and probably diverged millions of generations ago. We detect heterokaryotype excess and signs of balancing selection acting on these variants through the species’ history. A third chromosomal variant in the same genomic region likely evolved more recently from one of the two colour variants and is associated with dorsal pattern polymorphism. Our results suggest that large‐scale genetic variation associated with crypsis has been maintained for long periods of time by potentially complex processes of balancing selection.

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