The past, the recent, and the ongoing evolutionary processes of the
worldwide invasive ascidian Styela plicata
Abstract
Invasive species are one of the main threats to global biodiversity and,
within marine ecosystems, tunicates feature some prominent examples.
Styela plicata is an ascidian species inhabiting harbors in all
temperate oceans and seas, thus being considered a thriving invasive
species. However, this species’ adaptive mechanisms, introduction
history, and population structure have never been completely elucidated.
Here, by genotyping 87 S. plicata individuals from 18 localities
worldwide with 2b-RADseq, we confirm the presence of four chromosome
inversions, demonstrate population structuring on this species, detect
local adaptation signals, and infer historical demographic events. The
locality of North Carolina constitutes an utterly unrelated population,
Atlanto-Mediterranean and Pacific localities constitute their own
genetic clusters, and the South Carolina locality presents an
intermediate genetic position between North Carolina and the other two
groups. For each biogeographic population we highlight substructuring,
being the most evident the split between North Atlantic+Mediterranean
and the South Atlantic localities. We identify genomic drivers for
adaptation, with functions involved with cell processes, metabolism,
development, and ion transport, among others. We model ancient effective
population sizes, providing evidence on three main bottlenecks that
could correspond to different introduction events. Finally,
hybridization tests point to South Carolina having a hybrid origin,
likely resulting from a secondary contact between North Carolina and
other ancient populations. Overall, this study highlights the complex
historical processes of S. plicata, which have led this species to its
current distribution, population structure, and local adaptation
footprint in oceans worldwide.