Center for Population Biology, University of California Davis, Davis, California, USA.
PLoS Biol. 2010 Oct 26;8(10):e1000529. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000529.
Gene flow between populations that are adapting to distinct environments may be restricted if hybrids inherit maladaptive, intermediate phenotypes. This phenomenon, called extrinsic postzygotic isolation (EPI), is thought to play a critical role in the early stages of speciation. However, despite its intuitive appeal, we know surprisingly little about the strength and prevalence of EPI in nature, and even less about the specific phenotypes that tend to cause problems for hybrids. In this study, we searched for EPI among allopatric populations of the butterfly Euphydryas editha that have specialized on alternative host plants. These populations recall a situation thought typical of the very early stages of speciation. They lack consistent host-associated genetic differentiation at random nuclear loci and show no signs of reproductive incompatibility in the laboratory. However, they do differ consistently in diverse host-related traits. For each of these traits, we first asked whether hybrids between populations that use different hosts (different-host hybrids) were intermediate to parental populations and to hybrids between populations that use the same host (same-host hybrids). We then conducted field experiments to estimate the effects of intermediacy on fitness in nature. Our results revealed strong EPI under field conditions. Different-host hybrids exhibited an array of intermediate traits that were significantly maladaptive, including four behaviors. Intermediate foraging height slowed the growth of larvae, while intermediate oviposition preference, oviposition site height, and clutch size severely reduced the growth and survival of the offspring of adult females. We used our empirical data to construct a fitness surface on which different-host hybrids can be seen to fall in an adaptive valley between two peaks occupied by same-host hybrids. These findings demonstrate how ecological selection against hybrids can create a strong barrier to gene flow at the early stages of adaptive divergence.
如果适应不同环境的种群之间的基因流动受到限制,那么杂种可能会继承不利的中间表型。这种现象被称为外在合子后隔离(EPI),被认为在物种形成的早期阶段起着关键作用。然而,尽管这一现象具有直观的吸引力,但我们对自然环境中 EPI 的强度和普遍性知之甚少,甚至对导致杂种出现问题的特定表型也知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们在专门以替代寄主植物为食的蝴蝶 Euphydryas editha 的异地种群中寻找 EPI。这些种群让人联想到物种形成早期阶段的典型情况。它们在随机核基因座上缺乏与宿主相关的遗传分化,在实验室中也没有表现出繁殖不相容的迹象。然而,它们在与宿主相关的各种特征上确实存在一致的差异。对于这些特征中的每一个,我们首先询问使用不同宿主的种群(不同宿主杂种)之间的杂种是否处于亲本种群和使用相同宿主的种群(相同宿主杂种)之间的杂种的中间状态。然后,我们进行了野外实验来估计中间状态对自然环境中适应性的影响。我们的研究结果揭示了在野外条件下强烈的 EPI。不同宿主的杂种表现出一系列明显不利的中间特征,包括四个行为。中间觅食高度减缓了幼虫的生长,而中间产卵偏好、产卵地点高度和卵量严重降低了成年雌性后代的生长和存活率。我们利用我们的经验数据构建了一个适应度表面,在这个表面上,不同宿主的杂种可以被视为在由相同宿主的杂种占据的两个峰值之间的适应谷中下降。这些发现表明,生态选择对杂种的排斥如何在适应分化的早期阶段为基因流动创造一个强大的障碍。