846 12 NOVEMBER 2021¥VOL 374 ISSUE 6569 science.orgSCIENCE
S. taczanowskii
S. dalli
S. schlegelii
S. wilsoni
S. rosaceus
S. carnatus
S. inermis
S. semicinctus
S. steindachneri
S. serriceps
S. atrovirens
S. hopkinsi
S. exsul
S. minor
S. rastrelliger
S. melanops
S. zacentrus
S. flavidus
S. paucispinis
S. elongatus
S. rosenblatti
S. miniatus
S. mentella
S. caurinus
S. ciliatus
S. fasciatus
S. proriger
S. variabilis
S. entomelas
S. nebulosus
S. variegatus
S. ensifer
S. jordani
S. umbrosus
S. mystinus
S. chlorostictus
S. saxicola
S. auriculatus
S. goodei
S. constellatus
S. diploproa
S. helvomaculatus
S. aleutianus
S. babcocki
S. alutus
S. nigrocinctus
S. melanostomus
S. pinniger
S. aurora
S. maliger
S. reedi
S. ruberrimus
S. polyspinis
S. crameri
10
3
10
4
10
5
10
6
10
3
10
4
10
5
10
6
50
100
150
200
250
50
100
150
200
250
generations
N
(x10e
4 )
0.001
0.002
0.003
0.004
0.005
Heterozygosity per bp
A B
P 0.0046
50
100
150
11−3030−5252−7
9
79−200
lifespan quartile (yrs)
N
(x10e
4 )
P 6.6e−05
50
100
150
14−3030−4242−5151−64
size quartile (cm)
N
(x10e
4 )
C
D
Sebastolobus alascanus
Sebastolobus altivelis
Helicolenus avius
Hozukius emblemarius
Sebastes rosaceus
Adelosebastes latens
Sebastes umbrosus
Sebastes zacent
Sebastes mystinus
Sebastiscus tertius
Sebastes reedi
Sebastes levis
Sebastiscus albofasciatus
rus
Fig. 4. Life-history transitions are associated with patterns of diversity.(A) Nucleotide diversity across 88 different species. (B) MSMC-based estimates
of effective population sizes grouped by life span quartile over the last ~10^6 generations and averagedNegrouped by (C) life-span quartile or (D) grouped
by size quartile. Box and whisker plots indicate the median and interquartile range (IQR) with tails at the minimum and maximum values within 1.5 × IQR.
Pvalues from PGLS linear model.
Fig. 5. Shifts in life-history
traits reshape the mutational
spectrum of segregating
genetic variation.(A) Survival
curves for 34 rockfish species.
Humans, shown for comparison,
exhibit maximum life spans similar
to those of many rockfish species
but different survival curves
(type I versus type III survival).
(B) Rockfish fecundity (births per
season) plotted as a function of
age. (C) Reproductive value
plotted as a function of age.
(D) Generation times estimated
from survival and fecundity
plotted as a function of life span.
(E) Association of segregating
single-nucleotide variant mutation
types with life span across all
trinucleotide contexts. Asterisks
indicate age-associated mutational
profiles significant after multiple
testing correction (q< 0.05).
(F) The proportion of segregating
CpG→TpG mutations as a function
of maximum life span. LM,
linear regression model.
enrichment
-0.01 0.00 0.01
S. aleutianus
S. aurora
S. caurinus
S. crameri
S. flavidus
S. maliger
S. melanops
S. pinniger
S. ruberrimus
S. rufus
0
500
1000
1500
0 50 100 150 200
age
Fecundity (1000s)
Fecundity
0.00
0.25
0.50
0.75
1.00
0 50 100 150 200
age
p(survival)
S. aleutianusS. alutus
S. atrovirensS. auriculatus
S. auroraS. carnatus
S. caurinusS. chlorostictus
S. constellatusS. crameri
S. dalliS. diploproa
S. elongatusS. ensifer
S. entomelasS. flavidus
S. goodei
S. helvomaculatusS. hopkinsi
S. jordaniS. maliger
S. melanopsS. melanostomus
S. mystinusS. nebulosus
S. ovalisS. pinniger
S. rastrelligerS. rosaceus
S. rosenblattiS. ruberrimus
S. rufusS. serranoides
S. simulator
Survival
Human
0
10
20
0 50 100 150 200
age
Reproductive Value
Reproductive Value
10
20
30
40
50
50 100 150 200
Maximum lifespan
Generation time
(years)
Generation time
E 5’-
A
C
G
T
A
C
G
T
A
C
G
T
A
C
G
T
A
C
G
T
A
C
G
T
3’-AGCT
A
C
F
B
D
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