O'Connell Kyle A, Prates Ivan, Scheinberg Lauren A, Mulder Kevin P, Bell Rayna C
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
Global Genome Initiative, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Jun;30(12):2859-2871. doi: 10.1111/mec.15928. Epub 2021 May 10.
A period of isolation in allopatry typically precedes local adaptation and subsequent divergence among lineages. Alternatively, locally adapted phenotypes may arise and persist in the face of gene flow, resulting in strong correlations between ecologically-relevant phenotypic variation and corresponding environmental gradients. Quantifying genetic, ecological, and phenotypic divergence in such lineages can provide insights into the abiotic and biotic mechanisms that structure populations and drive the accumulation of phenotypic and taxonomic diversity. Low-vagility organisms whose distributions span ephemeral geographic barriers present the ideal evolutionary context within which to address these questions. Here, we combine genetic (mtDNA and genome-wide SNPs) and phenotypic data to investigate the divergence history of caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona) endemic to the oceanic island of São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea archipelago. Consistent with a previous mtDNA study, we find two phenotypically and genetically distinct lineages that occur along a north-to-south axis with extensive admixture in the centre of the island. Demographic modelling supports divergence in allopatry (300 kya) followed by secondary contact (95 kya). Consequently, in contrast to a morphological study that interpreted latitudinal phenotypic variation in these caecilians as a cline within a single widespread species, our analyses suggest a history of allopatric lineage divergence and subsequent hybridization that may have blurred species boundaries. We propose that late Pleistocene volcanic activity favoured allopatric divergence between these lineages with local adaptation to climate maintaining a stable hybrid zone in the centre of São Tomé Island. Our study joins a growing number of systems demonstrating lineage divergence on volcanic islands with stark environmental transitions across small geographic distances.
在异域隔离一段时间后,通常会出现局部适应以及随后谱系间的分化。或者,局部适应的表型可能会在基因流动的情况下出现并持续存在,导致与生态相关的表型变异和相应环境梯度之间存在强相关性。量化这些谱系中的遗传、生态和表型分化,可以深入了解构建种群以及推动表型和分类多样性积累的非生物和生物机制。分布跨越短暂地理障碍的低迁移性生物提供了研究这些问题的理想进化背景。在这里,我们结合遗传数据(线粒体DNA和全基因组单核苷酸多态性)和表型数据,来研究几内亚湾群岛圣多美大洋岛特有的蚓螈(两栖纲:蚓螈目)的分化历史。与之前的线粒体DNA研究一致,我们发现了两个在表型和遗传上不同的谱系,它们沿南北轴分布,在岛屿中部有广泛的混合。种群动态建模支持异域分化(约30万年前),随后是二次接触(约9.5万年前)。因此,与一项将这些蚓螈的纬度表型变异解释为单一广布物种内渐变群的形态学研究不同,我们的分析表明存在异域谱系分化和随后杂交的历史,这可能模糊了物种界限。我们认为,更新世晚期的火山活动促进了这些谱系之间的异域分化,对气候的局部适应在圣多美岛中部维持了一个稳定的杂交带。我们的研究加入了越来越多的系统研究,这些研究表明火山岛上的谱系分化,以及在小地理距离内存在明显的环境转变。