@article{310e0e6eb8db41c7b7a0786131b2197b,
title = "Population genomics of seal lice provides insights into the postglacial history of northern European seals",
abstract = "Genetic analyses of host-specific parasites can elucidate the evolutionary histories and biological features of their hosts. Here, we used population-genomic analyses of ectoparasitic seal lice (Echinophthirius horridus) to shed light on the postglacial history of seals in the Arctic Ocean and the Baltic Sea region. One key question was the enigmatic origin of relict landlocked ringed seal populations in lakes Saimaa and Ladoga in northern Europe. We found that that lice of four postglacially diverged subspecies of the ringed seal (Pusa hispida) and Baltic gray seal (Halichoerus grypus), like their hosts, form genetically differentiated entities. Using coalescent-based demographic inference, we show that the sequence of divergences of the louse populations is consistent with the geological history of lake formation. In addition, local effective population sizes of the lice are generally proportional to the census sizes of their respective seal host populations. Genome-based reconstructions of long-term effective population sizes revealed clear differences among louse populations associated with gray versus ringed seals, with apparent links to Pleistocene and Holocene climatic variation as well as to the isolation histories of ringed seal subspecies. Interestingly, our analyses also revealed ancient gene flow between the lice of Baltic gray and ringed seals, suggesting that the distributions of Baltic seals overlapped to a greater extent in the past than is the case today. Taken together, our results demonstrate how genomic information from specialized parasites with higher mutation and substitution rates than their hosts can potentially illuminate finer scale population genetic patterns than similar data from their hosts.",
keywords = "coalescent simulations, demographic history, genetic diversity, host-associated genetic differentiation, host–parasite interactions, phylogeography",
author = "Ludmila Sromek and Johnson, {Kevin P.} and Mervi Kunnasranta and Eeva Ylinen and Stephany Virrueta Herrera and Elena Andrievskaya and Vyacheslav Alexeev and Olga Rusinek and Aqqalu Rosing-Asvid and Tommi Nyman",
note = "First and foremost we would like to thank the seal researchers and conservation biologists who kindly provided samples of seal lice: Marja Isomursu (Finnish Food Authority), Miina Auttila (Finnish Forest Management Authority), and Marja Niemi, Vincent Biard, Sari Oksanen and other past and present members of the Saimaa Ringed Seal Research Group of the University of Eastern Finland, Eva Heitzmann (Ust-Barguzin), Jari Yl\u00F6nen and Jouni Aspi (University of Oulu), and Charlotta Moraeus and Britt-Marie B\u00E4cklin (Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm). We thank Alvaro Hernandez and Chris Wright at the University of Illinois Roy J. Carver Biotechnology Center for assistance with Illumina sequencing, and Kimberly K. O. Walden for assistance with depositing raw reads in NCBI SRA. We are grateful to Aaron Shafer (Trent University) for helpful discussions on demographic analyses. Constructive comments by three anonymous reviewers and the Subject Editor helped us to improve the presentation of our study. Templates for constructing maps of the postglacial history of northern Europe and the Baltic Sea basin were kindly provided by Anna Thieme and Datawrapper GmbH. Funding for this study was provided by the National Science Centre (NCN), Poland (project 2019/32/C/NZ8/00335 to L.S.), the Academy of Finland (project 294466 to T.N.) and the US National Science Foundation (awards DEB-1239788, DEB-1342604, DEB-1855812, DEB-1925487, DEB-1926919 and DEB-2328118 to K.P.J.). Sequencing costs were supported by grants from the Oskar \u00D6flund Foundation, the Betty V\u00E4\u00E4n\u00E4nen Foundation, Societas Pro Fauna et Flora Fennica, the Raija and Ossi Tuuliainen Foundation, and the Nestori Foundation. The computing resources were provided by the Finnish Centre for Scientific Computing (www.csc.fi). First and foremost we would like to thank the seal researchers and conservation biologists who kindly provided samples of seal lice: Marja Isomursu (Finnish Food Authority), Miina Auttila (Finnish Forest Management Authority), and Marja Niemi, Vincent Biard, Sari Oksanen and other past and present members of the Saimaa Ringed Seal Research Group of the University of Eastern Finland, Eva Heitzmann (Ust\u2010Barguzin), Jari Yl\u00F6nen and Jouni Aspi (University of Oulu), and Charlotta Moraeus and Britt\u2010Marie B\u00E4cklin (Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm). We thank Alvaro Hernandez and Chris Wright at the University of Illinois Roy J. Carver Biotechnology Center for assistance with Illumina sequencing, and Kimberly K. O. Walden for assistance with depositing raw reads in NCBI SRA. We are grateful to Aaron Shafer (Trent University) for helpful discussions on demographic analyses. Constructive comments by three anonymous reviewers and the Subject Editor helped us to improve the presentation of our study. Templates for constructing maps of the postglacial history of northern Europe and the Baltic Sea basin were kindly provided by Anna Thieme and Datawrapper GmbH. Funding for this study was provided by the National Science Centre (NCN), Poland (project 2019/32/C/NZ8/00335 to L.S.), the Academy of Finland (project 294466 to T.N.) and the US National Science Foundation (awards DEB\u20101239788, DEB\u20101342604, DEB\u20101855812, DEB\u20101925487, DEB\u20101926919 and DEB\u20102328118 to K.P.J.). Sequencing costs were supported by grants from the Oskar \u00D6flund Foundation, the Betty V\u00E4\u00E4n\u00E4nen Foundation, Societas Pro Fauna et Flora Fennica, the Raija and Ossi Tuuliainen Foundation, and the Nestori Foundation. The computing resources were provided by the Finnish Centre for Scientific Computing ( www.csc.fi ).",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1111/mec.17523",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "33",
journal = "Molecular ecology",
issn = "0962-1083",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "20",
}