4.2 Article

Pre-introduction introgression contributes to parallel differentiation and contrasting hybridization outcomes between invasive and native marine mussels

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 175-192

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13746

Keywords

genetic differentiation; hybrid zone; introgression; invasive species; Mytilus; parallel evolution

Funding

  1. Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS) National Taxonomy Research Grant [RF216-11]
  2. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. Society for the Study of Evolution
  4. University of Queensland

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This study investigates genetic parallelism in multiple introduced populations of the invasive marine mussel, Mytilus galloprovincialis, in different regions and with hybridization with a native congener. The results reveal repeatability in differentiation and introgression across genetically distinct lineages, highlighting the impact of demographic histories and pre-introduction introgression on contemporary admixture dynamics. The findings suggest that interspecific introgression history can shape differentiation between colonizing populations and their hybridization with native congeners.
Non-native species experience novel selection pressures in introduced environments and may interbreed with native lineages. Species introductions therefore provide opportunities to investigate repeated patterns of adaptation and introgression across replicated contact zones. Here, we investigate genetic parallelism between multiple introduced populations of the invasive marine mussel, Mytilus galloprovincialis, in the absence (South Africa and California) and presence of hybridization with a native congener (Mytilus planulatus in Batemans Bay and Sydney Harbour, Australia). Repeatability in post-introduction differentiation from native-range populations varied between genetically distinct Atlantic and Mediterranean lineages, with Atlantic-derived introductions displaying high differentiation (maxF(ST) > 0.4) and parallelism at outlier loci. Identification of long noncoding RNA transcripts (lncRNA) additionally allowed us to clarify that parallel responses are largely limited to protein-coding loci, with lncRNAs likely evolving under evolutionary constraints. Comparisons of independent hybrid zones revealed differential introgression most strongly in Batemans Bay, with an excess of M. galloprovincialis ancestry and resistance to introgression at loci differentiating parental lineages (M. planulatus and Atlantic M. galloprovincialis). Additionally, contigs putatively introgressed with divergent alleles from a closely related species, Mytilus edulis, showed stronger introgression asymmetries compared with genome-wide trends and also diverged in parallel in both Atlantic-derived introductions. These results suggest that divergent demographic histories experienced by introduced lineages, including pre-introduction introgression, influence contemporary admixture dynamics. Our findings build on previous investigations reporting contributions of historical introgression to intrinsic reproductive architectures shared between marine lineages and illustrate that interspecific introgression history can shape differentiation between colonizing populations and their hybridization with native congeners.

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