Data from: A quantitative genetic approach to assess the evolutionary potential of a coastal marine fish to ocean acidification
Assessing the potential of marine organisms to adapt genetically to increasing oceanic CO2 levels requires proxies such as heritability of fitness-related traits under ocean acidification (OA). We applied a quantitative genetic method to derive the first heritability estimate of survival under eleva...
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Zusammenfassung: | Assessing the potential of marine organisms to adapt genetically to
increasing oceanic CO2 levels requires proxies such as heritability of
fitness-related traits under ocean acidification (OA). We applied a
quantitative genetic method to derive the first heritability estimate of
survival under elevated CO2 conditions in a metazoan. Specifically, we
reared offspring, selected from a wild coastal fish population (Atlantic
silverside, Menidia menidia), at high CO2 conditions (~2,300 μatm) from
fertilization to 15 days post hatch, which significantly reduced survival
compared to controls. Perished and surviving offspring were quantitatively
sampled and genotyped along with their parents, using 8 polymorphic
microsatellite loci, to reconstruct a parent-offspring pedigree and
estimate variance components. Genetically related individuals were
phenotypically more similar (i.e., survived similarly long at elevated CO2
conditions) than unrelated individuals, which translated into a
significantly non-zero heritability (0.20 ± 0.07). The contribution of
maternal effects was surprisingly small (0.05 ± 0.04) and non-significant.
Survival among replicates was positively correlated with genetic
diversity, particularly with observed heterozygosity. We conclude that
early life survival of M. menidia under high CO2 levels has a significant
additive genetic component that could elicit an evolutionary response to
OA, depending on the strength and direction of future selection. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.bd6vs |