Contrasting patterns of gene flow between sister plant species in the understorey of African moist forests – The case of sympatric and parapatric Marantaceae species

•Levels of gene flow were compared between three sister species.•Sympatric sister species showed either no or high gene flow.•One species probably arose through hybridization between the two others.•The potential hybrid species maintains high gene flow with one putative parental species.•Our compari...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2014-08, Vol.77, p.264-274
Hauptverfasser: Ley, A.C., Hardy, O.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Levels of gene flow were compared between three sister species.•Sympatric sister species showed either no or high gene flow.•One species probably arose through hybridization between the two others.•The potential hybrid species maintains high gene flow with one putative parental species.•Our comparison with another genus illustrates the diversity of existing introgression patterns in Marantaceae. Gene flow within and between species is a fundamental process shaping the evolutionary history of taxa. However, the extent of hybridization and reinforcement is little documented in the tropics. Here we explore the pattern of gene flow between three sister species from the herbaceous genus Marantochloa (Marantaceae), sympatrically distributed in the understorey of the African rainforest, using data from the chloroplast and nuclear genomes (DNA sequences and AFLP). We found highly contrasting patterns: while there was no evidence of gene flow between M. congensis and M. monophylla, species identity between M. monophylla and M. incertifolia was maintained despite considerable gene flow. We hypothesize that M. incertifolia originated from an ancient hybridization event between M. congensis and M. monophylla, considering the current absence of hybridization between the two assumed parent species, the rare presence of shared haplotypes between all three species and the high percentage of haplotypes shared by M. incertifolia with each of the two parent species. This example is contrasted with two parapatrically distributed species from the same family in the genus Haumania forming a hybrid zone restricted to the area of overlap. This work illustrates the diversity of speciation/introgression patterns that can potentially occur in the flora of tropical Africa.
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2014.04.026