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Autores principales: Hart, Pamela Beth, Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa, Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando, Armbruster, Jonathan W, Troyer, Emily M, Bierstein, Orran M, Gough, Brendan J, Betancur-R, Ricardo, Niemiller, Matthew L, Arcila, Dahiana
Formato: Artículo científico
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: Proceedings. Biological sciences 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40669076/
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author Hart, Pamela Beth
Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa
Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando
Armbruster, Jonathan W
Troyer, Emily M
Bierstein, Orran M
Gough, Brendan J
Betancur-R, Ricardo
Niemiller, Matthew L
Arcila, Dahiana
author_facet Hart, Pamela Beth
Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa
Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando
Armbruster, Jonathan W
Troyer, Emily M
Bierstein, Orran M
Gough, Brendan J
Betancur-R, Ricardo
Niemiller, Matthew L
Arcila, Dahiana
Hart, Pamela Beth
Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa
Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando
Armbruster, Jonathan W
Troyer, Emily M
Bierstein, Orran M
Gough, Brendan J
Betancur-R, Ricardo
Niemiller, Matthew L
Arcila, Dahiana
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Ancient climate changes and relaxed selection shape cave colonization in North American cavefishes. Hart, Pamela Beth Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando Armbruster, Jonathan W Troyer, Emily M Bierstein, Orran M Gough, Brendan J Betancur-R, Ricardo Niemiller, Matthew L Arcila, Dahiana Animals Caves Phylogeny Climate Change Biological Evolution Selection, Genetic Fossils North America Fishes Extreme environments serve as natural laboratories for studying evolutionary processes, with caves offering replicated instances of independent colonizations. The timing, mode and genetic underpinnings underlying cave-obligate organismal evolution remain enigmatic. We integrate phylogenomics, fossils, palaeoclimatic modelling and newly sequenced genomes to elucidate the evolutionary history and adaptive processes of cave colonization in the study group, the North American Amblyopsidae fishes. Amblyopsid fishes present a unique system for investigating cave evolution, encompassing surface, facultative cave-dwelling and cave-obligate (troglomorphic) species. Using 1105 exon markers and total-evidence dating, we reconstructed a robust phylogeny that supports the nested position of eyed, facultative cave-dwelling species within blind cavefishes. We identified three independent cave colonizations, dated to the Early Miocene (18.5 Ma), Late Miocene (10.0 Ma) and Pliocene (3.0 Ma). Evolutionary model testing supported a climate-relict hypothesis, suggesting that global cooling trends since the Early-Middle Eocene may have influenced cave colonization. Comparative genomic analyses of 487 candidate genes revealed both relaxed and intensified selection on troglomorphy-related loci. We found more loci under relaxed selection, supporting neutral mutation as a significant mechanism in cave-obligate evolution. Our findings provide empirical support for climate-driven cave colonization and offer insights into the complex interplay of selective pressures in extreme environments.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40669076
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Proceedings. Biological sciences
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Ancient climate changes and relaxed selection shape cave colonization in North American cavefishes.
Hart, Pamela Beth
Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa
Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando
Armbruster, Jonathan W
Troyer, Emily M
Bierstein, Orran M
Gough, Brendan J
Betancur-R, Ricardo
Niemiller, Matthew L
Arcila, Dahiana
Animals
Caves
Phylogeny
Climate Change
Biological Evolution
Selection, Genetic
Fossils
North America
Fishes
Ancient climate changes and relaxed selection shape cave colonization in North American cavefishes. Hart, Pamela Beth Rincon-Sandoval, Melissa Melendez-Vazquez, Fernando Armbruster, Jonathan W Troyer, Emily M Bierstein, Orran M Gough, Brendan J Betancur-R, Ricardo Niemiller, Matthew L Arcila, Dahiana Animals Caves Phylogeny Climate Change Biological Evolution Selection, Genetic Fossils North America Fishes Extreme environments serve as natural laboratories for studying evolutionary processes, with caves offering replicated instances of independent colonizations. The timing, mode and genetic underpinnings underlying cave-obligate organismal evolution remain enigmatic. We integrate phylogenomics, fossils, palaeoclimatic modelling and newly sequenced genomes to elucidate the evolutionary history and adaptive processes of cave colonization in the study group, the North American Amblyopsidae fishes. Amblyopsid fishes present a unique system for investigating cave evolution, encompassing surface, facultative cave-dwelling and cave-obligate (troglomorphic) species. Using 1105 exon markers and total-evidence dating, we reconstructed a robust phylogeny that supports the nested position of eyed, facultative cave-dwelling species within blind cavefishes. We identified three independent cave colonizations, dated to the Early Miocene (18.5 Ma), Late Miocene (10.0 Ma) and Pliocene (3.0 Ma). Evolutionary model testing supported a climate-relict hypothesis, suggesting that global cooling trends since the Early-Middle Eocene may have influenced cave colonization. Comparative genomic analyses of 487 candidate genes revealed both relaxed and intensified selection on troglomorphy-related loci. We found more loci under relaxed selection, supporting neutral mutation as a significant mechanism in cave-obligate evolution. Our findings provide empirical support for climate-driven cave colonization and offer insights into the complex interplay of selective pressures in extreme environments.
title Ancient climate changes and relaxed selection shape cave colonization in North American cavefishes.
topic Animals
Caves
Phylogeny
Climate Change
Biological Evolution
Selection, Genetic
Fossils
North America
Fishes
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40669076/