Department of Evolution and Ecology & Center for Population Biology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2010 May 18;10:147. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-147.
Introductions of non-native tiger salamanders into the range of California tiger salamanders have provided a rare opportunity to study the early stages of secondary contact and hybridization. We produced first- and second-generation hybrid salamanders in the lab and measured viability among these early-generation hybrid crosses to determine the strength of the initial barrier to gene exchange. We also created contemporary-generation hybrids in the lab and evaluated the extent to which selection has affected fitness over approximately 20 generations of admixture. Additionally, we examined the inheritance of quantitative phenotypic variation to better understand how evolution has progressed since secondary contact.
We found significant variation in the fitness of hybrids, with non-native backcrosses experiencing the highest survival and F2 hybrids the lowest. Contemporary-generation hybrids had similar survival to that of F2 families, contrary to our expectation that 20 generations of selection in the wild would eliminate unfit genotypes and increase survival. Hybrid survival clearly exhibited effects of epistasis, whereas size and growth showed mostly additive genetic variance, and time to metamorphosis showed substantial dominance.
Based on first- and second- generation cross types, our results suggest that the initial barrier to gene flow between these two species was relatively weak, and subsequent evolution has been generally slow. The persistence of low-viability recombinant hybrid genotypes in some contemporary populations illustrates that while hybridization can provide a potent source of genetic variation upon which natural selection can act, the sorting of fit from unfit gene combinations might be inefficient in highly admixed populations. Spatio-temporal fluctuation in selection or complex genetics has perhaps stalled adaptive evolution in this system despite selection for admixed genotypes within generations.
非本地虎螈引入加利福尼亚虎螈的分布范围为研究二次接触和杂交的早期阶段提供了难得的机会。我们在实验室中产生了第一代和第二代杂交蝾螈,并测量了这些早期杂交种之间的生存能力,以确定基因交换的初始障碍的强度。我们还在实验室中创造了当代杂交种,并评估了选择在大约 20 代混合过程中对适应性的影响程度。此外,我们还检查了数量表型变异的遗传,以更好地了解自二次接触以来进化是如何进行的。
我们发现杂种的适应性存在显著差异,非本地回交的存活率最高,F2 杂种的存活率最低。与我们的预期相反,当代杂交种的存活率与 F2 家系相似,即在野外经过 20 代的选择,不会消除不适宜的基因型并提高存活率。杂种的存活率显然表现出上位性的影响,而大小和生长主要表现出加性遗传方差,变态时间表现出显著的显性。
基于第一代和第二代杂交类型,我们的结果表明,这两个物种之间基因流动的初始障碍相对较弱,随后的进化通常较慢。在一些当代种群中,低生存能力的重组杂交基因型的持续存在表明,虽然杂交可以提供一个潜在的遗传变异来源,自然选择可以在此基础上发挥作用,但在高度混合的种群中,对适宜基因组合的选择可能效率低下。尽管在几代内选择混合基因型,但选择或复杂遗传在这个系统中可能导致适应性进化停滞不前。