4.8 Article

An oligogenic architecture underlying ecological and reproductive divergence in sympatric populations

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.82825

Keywords

Clunio marinus; ecological speciation; magic trait; sympatric speciation; circalunar clock; Other

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This study reveals the genetic basis for the reproductive timing difference in closely related species, which is controlled by a gene involved in both circadian and lunar timing. The genetic differentiation in reproductive timing is attributed to four quantitative trait loci on three different chromosomes, suggesting the involvement of complex structural variations.
The evolutionary trajectories and genetic architectures underlying ecological divergence with gene flow are poorly understood. Sympatric timing types of the intertidal insect Clunio marinus (Diptera) from Roscoff (France) differ in lunar reproductive timing. One type reproduces at full moon, the other at new moon, controlled by a circalunar clock of yet unknown molecular nature. Lunar reproductive timing is a magic trait for a sympatric speciation process, as it is both ecologically relevant and entails assortative mating. Here, we show that the difference in reproductive timing is controlled by at least four quantitative trait loci (QTL) on three different chromosomes. They are partly associated with complex inversions, but differentiation of the inversion haplotypes cannot explain the different phenotypes. The most differentiated locus in the entire genome, with QTL support, is the period locus, implying that this gene could not only be involved in circadian timing but also in lunar timing. Our data indicate that magic traits can be based on an oligogenic architecture and can be maintained by selection on several unlinked loci.

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