4.7 Article

Unraveling Reticulate Evolution in Opuntia (Cactaceae) From Southern Mexico

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.606809

Keywords

Cactaceae; Opuntia; reticulate evolution; Tehuacan-Cuicatlan Valley; hybridization; phylogenetic networks; nuclear markers; introgression

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Funding

  1. PAPIIT-DGAPA, UNAM [IN208619]
  2. Instituto de Biologia, UNAM

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The study focused on testing the hybrid status of two putative hybrids from southern Mexico, finding introgression in Opuntia tehuacana and identifying O. decumbens as the likely parental species of Opuntia pilifera. Additionally, new cases of hybridization and introgression among southern Mexican species were suggested, involving species such as O. tehuantepecana and O. depressa as parental species of O. velutina and O. decumbens.
The process of hybridization occurs in approximately 40% of vascular plants, and this exchange of genetic material between non-conspecific individuals occurs unequally among plant lineages, being more frequent in certain groups such as Opuntia (Cactaceae). This genus is known for multiple taxonomic controversies due to widespread polyploidy and probable hybrid origin of several of its species. Southern Mexico species of this genus have been poorly studied despite their great diversity in regions such as the Tehuacan-Cuicatlan Valley which contains around 12% of recognized Mexico's native Opuntia species. In this work, we focus on testing the hybrid status of two putative hybrids from this region, Opuntia tehuacana and Opuntia pilifera, and estimate if hybridization occurs among sampled southern opuntias using two newly identified nuclear intron markers to construct phylogenetic networks with HyDe and Dsuite and perform invariant analysis under the coalescent model with HyDe and Dsuite. For the test of hybrid origin in O. tehuacana, our results could not recover hybridization as proposed in the literature, but we found introgression into O. tehuacana individuals involving O. decumbens and O. huajuapensis. Regarding O. pilifera, we identified O. decumbens as probable parental species, supported by our analysis, which sustains the previous hybridization hypothesis between Nopalea and Basilares clades. Finally, we suggest new hybridization and introgression cases among southern Mexican species involving O. tehuantepecana and O. depressa as parental species of O. velutina and O. decumbens.

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