Quilodrán Claudio S, Currat Mathias, Montoya-Burgos Juan I
Laboratory of anthropology, genetics and peopling history (AGP), Department of Genetics and Evolution, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland; Laboratory of molecular phylogeny and evolution in vertebrates, Department of Genetics and Evolution, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Laboratory of anthropology, genetics and peopling history (AGP), Department of Genetics and Evolution, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2014 Jul 8;9(7):e101736. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101736. eCollection 2014.
Interspecific hybridization is common in nature but can be increased in frequency or even originated by human actions, such as species introduction or habitat modification, which may threaten species persistence. When hybridization occurs between distantly related species, referred to as "distant hybridization," the resulting hybrids are generally infertile or fertile but do not undergo chromosomal recombination during gametogenesis. Here, we present a model describing this frequent but poorly studied interspecific hybridization to assess its consequences on parental species and to anticipate the conditions under which they can reach extinction. Our general model fully incorporates three important processes: density-dependent competition, dominance/recessivity inheritance of traits and assortative mating. We demonstrate its use and flexibility by assessing population extinction risk between Atlantic salmon and brown trout in Norway, whose interbreeding has recently increased due to farmed fish releases into the wild. We identified the set of conditions under which hybridization may threaten salmonid species. Thanks to the flexibility of our model, we evaluated the effect of an additional risk factor, a parasitic disease, and showed that the cumulative effects dramatically increase the extinction risk. The consequences of distant hybridization are not genetically, but demographically mediated. Our general model is useful to better comprehend the evolution of such hybrid systems and we demonstrated its importance in the field of conservation biology to set up management recommendations when this increasingly frequent type of hybridization is in action.
种间杂交在自然界中很常见,但人类活动,如物种引进或栖息地改造,可能会增加其发生频率,甚至引发种间杂交,这可能会威胁物种的存续。当远缘物种之间发生杂交,即“远缘杂交”时,产生的杂种通常不育,或者虽可育但在配子发生过程中不会发生染色体重组。在此,我们提出一个模型来描述这种常见但研究较少的种间杂交现象,以评估其对亲本物种的影响,并预测它们可能灭绝的条件。我们的通用模型全面纳入了三个重要过程:密度依赖竞争、性状的显性/隐性遗传以及选型交配。我们通过评估挪威大西洋鲑和褐鳟之间的种群灭绝风险,展示了该模型的用途和灵活性,它们之间的杂交最近因养殖鱼类放归野外而增加。我们确定了杂交可能威胁鲑科物种的一系列条件。由于我们模型的灵活性,我们评估了另一个风险因素——一种寄生虫病的影响,并表明累积效应会显著增加灭绝风险。远缘杂交的后果不是由基因介导的,而是由种群统计学介导的。我们的通用模型有助于更好地理解此类杂交系统的进化,并且我们证明了其在保护生物学领域的重要性,即在这种日益频繁的杂交现象发生时,为制定管理建议提供依据。