Ice-inhabiting species of Bdelloidea Rotifera reveal a pre-Quaternary ancestry in the Arctic cryosphere

Author:

Shain Daniel H.1ORCID,Rogozhina Irina2,Fontaneto Diego345ORCID,Nesje Atle6,Saglam Naim7,Bartlett Jesamine8,Zawierucha Krzysztof9,Kielland Øystein Nordeide10,Dunshea Glenn11,Arnason Einar12,Rosvold Jørgen8

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey , Camden, NJ 08103, USA

2. Department of Geography, Norwegian University of Science and Technology , Trondheim, Norway

3. National Research Council of Italy – Water Research Institute (CNR-IRSA), Molecular Ecology Group (MEG) , Verbania, Italy

4. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC) , Palermo, Italy

5. Laboratory of Non-Mendelian Evolution, Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic , Liběchov, Czech Republic

6. Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen , Bergen, Norway

7. Department of Aquaculture and Fish Diseases, Fisheries Faculty, Firat University , Elazig 23119, Turkey

8. Department of Terrestrial Biodiversity, Norwegian Institute for Nature Research , Trondheim, Norway

9. Department of Animal Taxonomy and Ecology, Adam Mickiewicz University , Poznań, Poland

10. Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Angelltrøa, PB 4024, 7457 , Trondheim, Norway

11. Department of Natural History, NTNU University Museum, Norwegian University of Science and Technology , Trondheim 7491, Norway

12. Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Iceland, Askja, Sturlugata 7 , Reykjavík, Iceland

Abstract

Historical climate data indicate that the Earth has passed through multiple geological periods with much warmer-than-present climates, including epochs of the Miocene (23–5.3 mya BP) with temperatures 3–4°C above present, and more recent interglacial stages of the Quaternary, for example, Marine Isotope Stage 11c (approx. 425–395 ka BP) and Middle Holocene thermal maximum (7.5–4.2 ka BP), during which continental glaciers may have melted entirely. Such warm periods would have severe consequences for ice-obligate fauna in terms of their distribution, biodiversity and population structure. To determine the impacts of these climatic events in the Nordic cryosphere, we surveyed ice habitats throughout mainland Norway and Svalbard ranging from maritime glaciers to continental ice patches (i.e. non-flowing, inland ice subjected to deep freezing overwinter), finding particularly widespread populations of ice-inhabiting bdelloid rotifers. Combined mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequencing identified approx. 16 undescribed, species-level rotifer lineages that revealed an ancestry predating the Quaternary (> 2.58 mya). These rotifers also displayed robust freeze/thaw tolerance in laboratory experiments. Collectively, these data suggest that extensive ice refugia, comparable with stable ice patches across the contemporary Norwegian landscape, persisted in the cryosphere over geological time, and may have facilitated the long-term survival of ice-obligate Metazoa before and throughout the Quaternary.

Funder

Fulbright Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

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