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Influence of geography, seasonality and experimental selection on Chironomus riparius recombination rates
Summary
Researchers tracked recombination rates in natural and experimental populations of the midge Chironomus riparius across geographic gradients, seasons, and stressor exposures, finding that microplastic exposure caused a genome-wide reduction in recombination—consistent with stress-induced prioritization of DNA repair—while cadmium broadly suppressed recombination through distinct mechanisms.
BACKGROUND: , assessing causality through structural equation modeling. RESULTS: In natural populations, recombination rates showed no clear latitudinal pattern, likely due to interactions between climate-driven selection, demographic history and regional environmental heterogeneity. However, seasonal variation was evident, with higher recombination rates in autumn than winter, possibly due to temperature-induced plasticity or seasonal bottlenecks. A cold snap in March 2018 triggered a sharp recombination increase, potentially suggesting a stress-induced adaptive response. Across datasets, recombination rates were correlated with genetic diversity and other genomic parameters, with structural equation models (SEMs) indicating that recombination and selection jointly shape patterns of π and differentiation, while relationships with GC content and TEs counts varied among environmental and experimental contexts. In experimental populations, thermal regimes alone had little effect on recombination; instead, adaptation to laboratory conditions and specific stressors drove recombination changes. Exposure to microplastics led to a genome-wide reduction in recombination, likely due to stress-induced DNA repair prioritizing genome integrity, whereas cadmium exposure generally suppressed recombination. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that recombination in C. riparius is a highly dynamic trait influenced by environmental conditions, selection, and genomic context. By integrating ecological variation, experimental evolution, and multivariate genomic analyses, this study highlights recombination as a context-dependent process that responds to both natural and anthropogenic stressors and interacts with multiple features of genome architecture.