Roy Denis, Lucek Kay, Walter Ryan P, Seehausen Ole
Centre for Ecology, Evolution & Biogeochemistry, EAWAG Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Seestrasse 79, 6074, Kastanienbaum, Switzerland.
Institute for Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 6, 3012, Bern, Switzerland.
Mol Ecol. 2015 Nov;24(21):5394-411. doi: 10.1111/mec.13405. Epub 2015 Oct 21.
Understanding the genetic background of invading species can be crucial information clarifying why they become invasive. Intraspecific genetic admixture among lineages separated in the native ranges may promote the rate and extent of an invasion by substantially increasing standing genetic variation. Here, we examined the genetic relationships among threespine stickleback that recently colonized Switzerland. This invasion results from several distinct genetic lineages that colonized multiple locations and have since undergone range expansions, where they coexist and admix in parts of their range. Using 17 microsatellites genotyped for 634 individuals collected from 17 Swiss and two non-Swiss European sites, we reconstruct the invasion of stickleback and investigate the potential and extent of admixture and hybridization among the colonizing lineages from a population genetic perspective. Specifically, we test for an increase in standing genetic variation in populations where multiple lineages coexist. We find strong evidence of massive hybridization early on, followed by what appears to be recent increased genetic isolation and the formation of several new genetically distinguishable populations, consistent with a hybrid 'superswarm'. This massive hybridization and population formation event(s) occurred over approximately 140 years and likely fuelled the successful invasion of a diverse range of habitats. The implications are that multiple colonizations coupled with hybridization can lead to the formation of new stable genetic populations potentially kick-starting speciation and adaptive radiation over a very short timescale.
了解入侵物种的遗传背景可能是阐明它们为何会变成入侵物种的关键信息。在原生范围内分离的谱系间的种内遗传混合,可能通过大幅增加现有遗传变异,来促进入侵的速度和范围。在这里,我们研究了最近在瑞士定居的三刺鱼之间的遗传关系。这次入侵源于几个不同的遗传谱系,它们在多个地点定居,此后经历了范围扩张,在其部分分布范围内共存并混合。利用从17个瑞士和2个非瑞士欧洲地点收集的634个个体的17个微卫星基因分型,我们重建了三刺鱼的入侵过程,并从群体遗传学角度研究了定居谱系间混合和杂交的可能性及程度。具体来说,我们测试了多个谱系共存的种群中现有遗传变异的增加情况。我们发现了早期大量杂交的有力证据,随后似乎是近期遗传隔离增加以及形成了几个新的可遗传区分的种群,这与一个杂交“超级群体”一致。这一大量杂交和种群形成事件发生在大约140年的时间里,可能推动了对各种栖息地的成功入侵。其意义在于,多次定居加上杂交可以导致新的稳定遗传种群的形成,有可能在非常短的时间尺度上启动物种形成和适应性辐射。