Department of Zoology, and Biodiversity Research Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
State Darwin Museum, Moscow, Russia.
Mol Ecol. 2024 Oct;33(19):e17526. doi: 10.1111/mec.17526. Epub 2024 Sep 11.
Under allopatric speciation, populations of a species become isolated by a geographic barrier and develop reproductive isolation through genetic differentiation. When populations meet in secondary contact, the strength of evolved reproductive barriers determines the extent of hybridization and whether the populations will continue to diverge or merge together. The yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella) and pine bunting (E. leucocephalos) are avian sister species that diverged in allopatry on either side of Eurasia during the Pleistocene glaciations. Though they differ greatly in plumage and form distinct genetic clusters in allopatry, these taxa show negligible mitochondrial DNA differentiation and hybridize extensively where they overlap in central Siberia, lending uncertainty to the state of reproductive isolation in the system. To assess the strength of reproductive barriers between taxa, we examined genomic differentiation across the system. We found that extensive admixture has occurred in sympatry, indicating that reproductive barriers between taxa are weak. We also identified a putative Z chromosome inversion region that underlies plumage variation in the system, with the 'pine bunting' haplotype showing dominance over the 'yellowhammer' haplotype. Our results suggest that yellowhammers and pine buntings are currently at a crossroads and that evolutionary forces may push this system towards either continued differentiation or population merging. However, even if these taxa merge, recombination suppression between putative chromosome Z inversion haplotypes may maintain divergent plumage phenotypes within the system. In this way, our findings highlight the important role hybridization plays in increasing the genetic and phenotypic variation as well as the evolvability of a system.
在异地物种形成中,一个物种的种群被地理屏障隔离,并通过遗传分化发展出生殖隔离。当种群在次生接触时,进化而来的生殖障碍的强度决定了杂交的程度,以及种群是否会继续分化或合并在一起。黄腹鹀(Emberiza citrinella)和松雀(E. leucocephalos)是鸟类的姐妹种,它们在更新世冰川期间在欧亚大陆的两侧异地分化。尽管它们在羽毛上有很大的差异,在异地形成明显的遗传聚类,但这些类群在中线粒体 DNA 上的分化很小,在西伯利亚中部重叠的地方广泛杂交,这使得系统中生殖隔离的状态不确定。为了评估类群之间生殖障碍的强度,我们检查了整个系统的基因组分化。我们发现,在同域已经发生了广泛的混合,表明类群之间的生殖障碍很弱。我们还鉴定了一个潜在的 Z 染色体倒位区域,该区域是系统中羽毛变异的基础,“松雀”单倍型表现出对“黄腹鹀”单倍型的优势。我们的结果表明,黄腹鹀和松雀目前正处于十字路口,进化力量可能会促使这个系统朝着继续分化或种群合并的方向发展。然而,即使这些类群合并,潜在的染色体 Z 倒位单倍型之间的重组抑制也可能在系统内维持不同的羽毛表型。通过这种方式,我们的研究结果强调了杂交在增加系统的遗传和表型变异以及可进化性方面的重要作用。