4.5 Article

Postzygotic isolation drives genomic speciation between highly cryptic Hypocnemis antbirds from Amazonia

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 74, Issue 11, Pages 2512-2525

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14103

Keywords

Amazon; genetic incompatibility; hybridization; Hypocnemis; postzygotic reproductive isolation; speciation

Funding

  1. PDSE-CAPES [88881.189565/2018-01]
  2. CNPq ('INCT em Biodiversidade Uso da Terra da Amazonia') [574008/2008-0, 471342/2011-4, 310880/2012-2, 306843/2016-1]
  3. Amazonia Paraense Foundation-FAPESPA [ICAAF 023/2011]
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) CGS-D fellowship [411293437]
  5. NSERC [402013-2011, RGPIN-2016-0653]
  6. NSERC Accelerator Grant [492890]

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How species evolve reproductive isolation in the species-rich Amazon basin is poorly understood in vertebrates. Here, we sequenced a reference genome and used a genome-wide sample of SNPs to analyze a hybrid zone between two highly cryptic species ofHypocnemiswarbling-antbirds-the Rondonia warbling-antbird (H. ochrogyna) and Spix's warbling-antbird (H. striata)-in a headwater region of southern Amazonia. We found that both species commonly hybridize, producing F(1)s and a variety of backcrosses with each species but we detected only one F-2-like hybrid. Patterns of heterozygosity, hybrid index, and interchromosomal linkage disequilibrium in hybrid populations closely match expectations under strong postzygotic isolation. Hybrid zone width (15.4 km) was much narrower than expected (211 km) indicating strong selection against hybrids. A remarkably high degree of concordance in cline centers and widths across loci, and a lack of reduced interspecificF(st)between populations close to versus far from the contact zone, suggest that genetic incompatibilities have rendered most of the genome immune to introgression. These results support intrinsic postzygotic isolation as a driver of speciation in a moderately young cryptic species pair from the Amazon and suggest that species richness of the Amazon may be grossly underestimated.

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