Fitness dynamics within a poplar hybrid zone: I. Prezygotic and postzygotic barriers impacting a native poplar hybrid stand

Hybridization and introgression are pervasive evolutionary phenomena that provide insight into the selective forces that maintain species boundaries, permit gene flow, and control the direction of evolutionary change. Poplar trees (Populus L.) are well known for their ability to form viable hybrids...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology and evolution 2014-05, Vol.4 (9), p.1629-1647
Hauptverfasser: Roe, Amanda D., MacQuarrie, Chris J. K., Gros‐Louis, Marie‐Claude, Simpson, J. Dale, Lamarche, Josyanne, Beardmore, Tannis, Thompson, Stacey L., Tanguay, Philippe, Isabel, Nathalie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hybridization and introgression are pervasive evolutionary phenomena that provide insight into the selective forces that maintain species boundaries, permit gene flow, and control the direction of evolutionary change. Poplar trees (Populus L.) are well known for their ability to form viable hybrids and maintain their distinct species boundaries despite this interspecific gene flow. We sought to quantify the hybridization dynamics and postzygotic fitness within a hybrid stand of balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera L.), eastern cottonwood (P. deltoides Marsh.), and their natural hybrids to gain insight into the barriers maintaining this stable hybrid zone. We observed asymmetrical hybrid formation with P. deltoides acting as the seed parent, but with subsequent introgression biased toward P. balsamifera. Native hybrids expressed fitness traits intermediate to the parental species and were not universally unfit. That said, native hybrid seedlings were absent from the seedling population, which may indicate additional selective pressures controlling their recruitment. It is imperative that we understand the selective forces maintaining this native hybrid zone in order to quantify the impact of exotic poplar hybrids on this native system. Native hybrids between Populus deltoides and P. balsamifera expressed fitness traits intermediate to their parental species and were not universally unfit. That said, native hybrid seedlings were absent from the seedling population, which may indicate additional selective pressures controlling their recruitment. Understanding the process of hybridization and subsequent introgression provides insight into the processes shaping the evolutionary trajectory of plant populations.
ISSN:2045-7758
2045-7758
DOI:10.1002/ece3.1029