Combrink Lucia L, Golcher-Benavides Jimena, Lewanski Alexander L, Rick Jessica A, Rosenthal William C, Wagner Catherine E
Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2025 Jan;34(2):e17574. doi: 10.1111/mec.17574. Epub 2024 Dec 24.
Adaptive radiations are rich laboratories for exploring, testing, and understanding key theories in evolution and ecology because they offer spectacular displays of speciation and ecological adaptation. Particular challenges to the study of adaptive radiation include high levels of species richness, rapid speciation, and gene flow between species. Over the last decade, high-throughput sequencing technologies and access to population genomic data have lessened these challenges by enabling the analysis of samples from many individual organisms at whole-genome scales. Here we review how population genomic data have facilitated our knowledge of adaptive radiation in five key areas: (1) phylogenetics, (2) hybridization, (3) timing and rates of diversification, (4) the genomic basis of trait evolution, and (5) the role of genome structure in divergence. We review current knowledge in each area, highlight outstanding questions, and focus on methods that facilitate detection of complex patterns in the divergence and demography of populations through time. It is clear that population genomic data are revolutionising the ability to reconstruct evolutionary history in rapidly diversifying clades. Additionally, studies are increasingly emphasising the central role of gene flow, re-use of standing genetic variation during adaptation, and structural genomic elements as facilitators of the speciation process in adaptive radiations. We highlight hybridization-and the hypothesized processes by which it shapes diversification-and questions seeking to bridge the divide between microevolutionary and macroevolutionary processes as rich areas for future study. Overall, access to population genomic data has facilitated an exciting era in adaptive radiation research, with implications for deeper understanding of fundamental evolutionary processes across the tree of life.
适应性辐射是探索、检验和理解进化与生态学关键理论的丰富实验室,因为它们展现了物种形成和生态适应的壮观景象。适应性辐射研究面临的特殊挑战包括物种丰富度高、物种形成迅速以及物种间的基因流动。在过去十年中,高通量测序技术以及种群基因组数据的获取,通过能够在全基因组尺度上分析来自许多个体生物的样本,减轻了这些挑战。在这里,我们回顾种群基因组数据如何在五个关键领域促进了我们对适应性辐射的认识:(1)系统发育学,(2)杂交,(3)多样化的时间和速率,(4)性状进化的基因组基础,以及(5)基因组结构在分化中的作用。我们回顾了每个领域的现有知识,突出了悬而未决的问题,并关注有助于检测种群随时间分化和人口统计学中复杂模式的方法。很明显,种群基因组数据正在彻底改变在快速多样化的进化枝中重建进化历史的能力。此外,研究越来越强调基因流动、适应过程中现有遗传变异的重新利用以及结构基因组元件在适应性辐射物种形成过程中的促进作用。我们强调杂交——以及它塑造多样化的假设过程——以及试图弥合微观进化和宏观进化过程之间差距的问题,将其作为未来研究的丰富领域。总体而言,种群基因组数据的获取促进了适应性辐射研究的一个激动人心的时代,这对更深入理解生命之树中基本的进化过程具有重要意义。