Abstract
The architecture underpinning genomic divergence is still a largely
uncharted territory and likely case-dependent. Here, we investigated
genome-wide variation in Ballan wrasse, a northeastern Atlantic fish
species that displays two sympatric color morphs, spotty and plain, that
have been suggested to represent subspecies. We produced a
chromosome-level reference genome, and thereafter investigated genomic
divergence among 152 individuals including both morphs, from two
localities in Spain and Norway each, and one in France. Differences
between morphs dominated in Spain in accordance with sympatric
divergence, whereas in Norway geographic divergence was highest
supporting allopatric differentiation. Chromosomes had very large
low-recombining areas that were shared across populations and have
accumulated further divergence. Within the Spanish morphs, large islands
of divergence covered ~11% of the genome, showed high
morph-specificity, and strong selection. The same regions showed
frequent admixture in the French morphs and no differentiation in
Norway. In contrast, divergent regions observed between sampling
localities in Norway were scattered, shorter and found throughout the
genome. High inbreeding and lower diversity were observed in the
Norwegian samples, consistent with the proposed recolonization
bottleneck and subsequent drift. Several genomic regions were
significantly associated with morphs and contained tens of genes of
diverse functions, suggesting that coloration is unlikely to be the sole
driver of divergence. Our results suggest that large, polygenic
divergence islands were initially formed and preserved in the south but
were gradually lost and uncoupled from the phenotype of the fish further
north when these areas were repopulated after the last glacial maximum.