4.3 Article

Lost in the hybridisation vortex: high-elevation Senecio hercynicus (Compositae, Senecioneae) is genetically swamped by its congener S-ovatus in the Bavarian Forest National Park (SE Germany)

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 401-420

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-017-9890-7

Keywords

Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP); Adaptive introgression; Hybridisation; Natural selection; Population genomics; Senecio nemorensis syngameon

Funding

  1. Bavarian Forest National Park

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hybridisation is an important evolutionary process. The investigation of hybridisation along elevational gradients, with their steep abiotic and biotic clines, provides insight into the adaptation and maintenance of species in adjacent habitats. The rare Senecio hercynicus and its spreading congener S. ovatus are vertically vicariant species that show hybridisation in their range overlaps. In the present study, we used AFLP fingerprinting of 689 individuals from 38 populations to analyse population structure and introgression patterns along four elevational transects (650-1350 m) in the Bavarian Forest National Park, Gemany. Subsequently, we searched for loci putatively under divergent selection that may maintain 'pure' species despite hybrid formation by identifying taxon-specific alleles. A maximum-likelihood based hybrid index shows that the overall genetic differentiation among all populations was very low with a vanishingly small number of pure parental individuals. Almost 75% of the investigated individuals were classified as backcrosses towards S. ovatus. The highest S. hercynicus ancestry was found in the uppermost populations of two transects. Further, we found seven taxon-specific alleles being under divergent selection that correlated with climatic variables and deviating from neutral introgression. According to our results, hybridisation of S. ovatus and S. hercynicus has reached an advanced state of genetic swamping and there seems to be no driving force that is strong enough to keep both species as different lineages. Rather, S. ovatus appears to benefit through putatively adaptive introgression.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available