4.5 Article

LOSS OF SEXUAL RECOMBINATION AND SEGREGATION IS ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED DIVERSIFICATION IN EVENING PRIMROSES

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 65, Issue 11, Pages 3230-3240

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2011.01378.x

Keywords

Apomixis; BiSSE; comparative biology; Oenothera; translocation heterozygote

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health
  2. Duke University's Center for Evolutionary Genomics
  3. UBC
  4. Manaaki Whenua/Landcare Research
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. NC State University
  7. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB-0919869, DEB-0950486, DEB-0448889, DEB-0841521]
  8. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (Canada)
  9. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences [0923119] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The loss of sexual recombination and segregation in asexual organisms has been portrayed as an irreversible process that commits asexually reproducing lineages to reduced diversification. We test this hypothesis by estimating rates of speciation, extinction, and transition between sexuality and functional asexuality in the evening primroses. Specifically, we estimate these rates using the recently developed BiSSE (Binary State Speciation and Extinction) phylogenetic comparative method, which employs maximum likelihood and Bayesian techniques. We infer that net diversification rates (speciation minus extinction) in functionally asexual evening primrose lineages are roughly eight times faster than diversification rates in sexual lineages, largely due to higher speciation rates in asexual lineages. We further reject the hypothesis that a loss of recombination and segregation is irreversible because the transition rate from functional asexuality to sexuality is significantly greater than zero and in fact exceeded the reverse rate. These results provide the first empirical evidence in support of the alternative theoretical prediction that asexual populations should instead diversify more rapidly than sexual populations because they are free from the homogenizing effects of sexual recombination and segregation. Although asexual reproduction may often constrain adaptive evolution, our results show that the loss of recombination and segregation need not be an evolutionary dead end in terms of diversification of lineages.

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