Sunday, August 25, 2019

MEB Seminar | Dr. Sheila Kitchen

Dr. Sheila Kitchen
Post-Doc, California Institute of Technology, PI: Dr. Joseph Parker
Research Website

Adaptive potential and limits in Caribbean acroporid corals

Tuesday, August 27
12 PM
AHF 153 (Torrey Webb Room)

Abstract: Reef-building corals are currently threatened by rapid changes in local and global stressors, and hybridization offers a potential shortcut for rapid adaptation and evolutionary rescue in these species. The sympatric corals Acropora palmata and A. cervicornis form the hybrid, A. prolifera, whose abundance has continued to increase while the parental species decline. Previous work indicates that weakened prezygotic isolation mechanisms in A. cervicornis but not A. palmata could allow for continuous unidirectional gene flow between the two species. Furthermore, asymmetric introgression from A. palmata to A. cervicornis has been recorded in three nuclear loci. In contrast, we found evidence for bidirectional introgession across three hybrid zones, although the frequency of hybrids and backcrosses differs across the range. Genome assemblies of A. palmataand A. cervicornis were compared to other corals to identify orthologs uniquely shared by the Caribbean acroporids. Genomic sequence data from the two parental species and their hybrids was used to further characterize the patterns of genomic synteny, divergence and introgression across hybrid zones. Combined, these approaches elucidate genomic hotspots of introgression and parallel evolution with implications for how hybridization may shape adaptation in these important foundation species across the Caribbean and North-West Atlantic.

Host: Dr. Carly Kenkel

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