4.6 Article

The Build-Up of Population Genetic Divergence along the Speciation Continuum during a Recent Adaptive Radiation of Rhagoletis Flies

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13020275

Keywords

ecological speciation; clines; gene flow; hybridization; sympatric speciation; Tephritidae

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1638997, 1639500]
  2. National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2015-67013-23289]

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This study investigates the genetic variation and divergence in the Rhagoletis pomonella species group (RPSG) and finds that different taxa within the group are currently diverging under gene flow. The derived species are nested within the genetic variation of hawthorn-infesting populations of R. pomonella and show marked differences in genotype clustering and differentiation among sympatric populations.
New species form through the evolution of genetic barriers to gene flow between previously interbreeding populations. The understanding of how speciation proceeds is hampered by our inability to follow cases of incipient speciation through time. Comparative approaches examining different diverging taxa may offer limited inferences, unless they fulfill criteria that make the comparisons relevant. Here, we test for those criteria in a recent adaptive radiation of the Rhagoletis pomonella species group (RPSG) hypothesized to have diverged in sympatry via adaptation to different host fruits. We use a large-scale population genetic survey of 1568 flies across 33 populations to: (1) detect on-going hybridization, (2) determine whether the RPSG is derived from the same proximate ancestor, and (3) examine patterns of clustering and differentiation among sympatric populations. We find that divergence of each in-group RPSG taxon is occurring under current gene flow, that the derived members are nested within the large pool of genetic variation present in hawthorn-infesting populations of R. pomonella, and that sympatric population pairs differ markedly in their degree of genotypic clustering and differentiation across loci. We conclude that the RPSG provides a particularly robust opportunity to make direct comparisons to test hypotheses about how ecological speciation proceeds despite on-going gene flow.

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