4.7 Article

Initiation of speciation across multiple dimensions in a rock-restricted, tropical lizard

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 32, 期 3, 页码 680-695

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16787

关键词

chemical signals; ecomorphology; genomics; phylogeography; reptiles; speciation

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This study explores multiple dimensions in two species complexes of gekkonid lizards in tropical Australia, and finds that the rock-restricted species, Heteronotia planiceps, exhibits exceptional fine-scale phylogeographical structure compared to the habitat generalist, Heteronotia binoei. Divergence in genomes, ecomorphology, and chemical signals all play a role in the incipient speciation of H. planiceps, with significant divergence observed in chemical signals between lineages.
Population isolation and concomitant genetic divergence, resulting in strong phylogeographical structure, is a core aspect of speciation initiation. If and how speciation then proceeds and ultimately completes depends on multiple factors that mediate reproductive isolation, including divergence in genomes, ecology and mating traits. Here we explored these multiple dimensions in two young (Plio-Pleistocene) species complexes of gekkonid lizards (Heteronotia) from the Kimberley-Victoria River regions of tropical Australia. Using mitochondrial DNA screening and exon capture phylogenomics, we show that the rock-restricted Heteronotia planiceps exhibits exceptional fine-scale phylogeographical structure compared to the codistributed habitat generalist Heteronotia binoei. This indicates pervasive population isolation and persistence in the rock-specialist, and thus a high rate of speciation initiation across this geographically complex region, with levels of genomic divergence spanning the grey zone of speciation. Proximal lineages of H. planiceps were often separated by different rock substrates, suggesting a potential role for ecological isolation; however, phylogenetic incongruence and historical introgression were inferred between one such pair. Ecomorphological divergence among lineages within both H. planiceps and H. binoei was limited, except that limestone-restricted lineages of H. planiceps tended to be larger than rock-generalists. By contrast, among-lineage divergence in the chemical composition of epidermal pore secretions (putative mating trait) exceeded ecomorphology in both complexes, but with less trait overlap among lineages in H. planiceps. This system-particularly the rock-specialist H. planiceps-highlights the role of multidimensional divergence during incipient speciation, with divergence in genomes, ecomorphology and chemical signals all at play at very fine spatial scales.

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