Data from: Selection and sex-biased dispersal in a coastal shark: the influence of philopatry on adaptive variation
Data files
Oct 29, 2015 version files 640.69 MB
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FB_filters_Bhead.sh
8.62 KB
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Filter_Script.sh
2.56 KB
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HaplistNov21.hap
47.34 KB
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NeutralHaps.gen
3.33 MB
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OutlierHaps.gen
26.56 KB
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pop_map.shark
1.34 KB
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reference.fasta
59.72 MB
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SampleCollectionInfo.xlsx
17.12 KB
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SNP.FINAL.recode.vcf
31.42 MB
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TotalRawVariants.vcf.gz
546.06 MB
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visualist
487 B
Abstract
Sex-biased dispersal is expected to homogenize nuclear genetic variation relative to variation in genetic material inherited through the philopatric sex. When site fidelity occurs across a heterogeneous environment, local selective regimes may alter this pattern. We assessed spatial patterns of variation in nuclear-encoded, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and sequences of the mitochondrial control region in bonnethead sharks (Sphyrna tiburo), a species thought to exhibit female philopatry, collected from summer habitats used for gestation. Geographic patterns of mtDNA haplotypes and putatively neutral SNPs confirmed female philopatry and male-mediated gene flow along the northeastern coast of the Gulf of Mexico. A total of 30 outlier SNP loci were identified; alleles at over half of these loci exhibited signatures of latitude-associated selection. Our results indicate that in species with sex-biased dispersal, philopatry can facilitate sorting of locally adaptive variation, with the dispersing sex facilitating movement of potentially adaptive variation among locations and environments.