Contrasting levels of hybridization across the two contact zones between two hedgehog species revealed by genome-wide SNP data
Hybridization and introgression have played important roles in the history of various species, including lineage diversification and the evolution of adaptive traits. Hybridization can accelerate the development of reproductive isolation between diverging species, and thus valuable insight into the...
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Zusammenfassung: | Hybridization and introgression have played important roles in the history
of various species, including lineage diversification and the evolution of
adaptive traits. Hybridization can accelerate the development of
reproductive isolation between diverging species, and thus valuable
insight into the evolution of reproductive barrier formation may be gained
by studying secondary contact zones. Hedgehogs of the genus Erinaceus,
which are insectivores sensitive to changes in climate, are a pioneer
model in Pleistocene phylogeography. The present study provides the first
genome-wide SNP data regarding the Erinaceus hedgehogs species complex,
offering a unique comparison of two secondary contact zones between
Erinaceus europaeus and E. roumanicus. Results confirmed diversification
of the genus during the Pleistocene period and detected a new refugial
lineage of E. roumanicus outside the Mediterranean region, most likely in
the Ponto-Caspian region. In the Central European zone, the level of
hybridization was low, whereas in the Russian-Baltic zone, both species
hybridise extensively. Asymmetrical gene flow from E. europaeus to E.
roumanicus suggests that reproductive isolation varies according to the
direction of the crosses in the hybrid zones. However, no loci with
significantly different patterns of introgression were detected. Markedly
different pre- and post-zygotic barriers, and thus diverse modes of
species boundary maintenance in the two contact zones, likely exist. This
pattern is probably a consequence of the different ages and thus of the
different stages of evolution of reproductive isolating mechanisms in each
hybrid zone. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.2547d7wnt |