4.8 Article

Changes in selection pressure can facilitate hybridization during biological invasion in a Cuban lizard

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108638118

Keywords

invasive species; hybridization; Anolis; natural selection; sex chromosome

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. Barbour award from the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB-1927194, IOS-1827647, DEB-1354897]
  5. University of Rhode Island
  6. John Templeton Foundation

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Our study showed that hybridization in invasive populations is influenced by changes in natural selection, with stable genetic structure over time suggesting limited gene flow among invasive populations. The persistence of hybrids in invasive populations is attributed to changes in natural selection during invasion. Additionally, a large-effect X chromosome locus associated with limb length variation plays a role in hybrid adaptation.
Hybridization is among the evolutionary mechanisms most frequently hypothesized to drive the success of invasive species, in part because hybrids are common in invasive populations. One explanation for this pattern is that biological invasions coincide with a change in selection pressures that limit hybridization in the native range. To investigate this possibility, we studied the introduction of the brown anole (Anolis sagrei) in the southeastern United States. We find that native populations are highly genetically structured. In contrast, all invasive populations show evidence of hybridization among native-range lineages. Temporal sampling in the invasive range spanning 15 y showed that invasive genetic structure has stabilized, indicating that large-scale contemporary gene flow is limited among invasive populations and that hybrid ancestry is maintained. Additionally, our results are consistent with hybrid persistence in invasive populations resulting from changes in natural selection that occurred during invasion. Specifically, we identify a large-effect X chromosome locus associated with variation in limb length, a well-known adaptive trait in anoles, and show that this locus is often under selection in the native range, but rarely so in the invasive range. Moreover, we find that the effect size of alleles at this locus on limb length is much reduced in hybrids among divergent lineages, consistent with epistatic interactions. Thus, in the native range, epistasis manifested in hybrids can strengthen extrinsic postmating isolation. Together, our findings show how a change in natural selection can contribute to an increase in hybridization in invasive populations.

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