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- Title
Distinctiveness in the face of gene flow: hybridization between specialist and generalist gartersnakes.
- Authors
FITZPATRICK, BENJAMIN M.; PLACYK, JR, JOHN S.; NIEMILLER, MATTHEW L.; CASPER, GARY S.; BURGHARDT, GORDON M.
- Abstract
Patterns of divergence and polymorphism across hybrid zones can provide important clues as to their origin and maintenance. Unimodal hybrid zones or hybrid swarms are composed predominantly of recombinant individuals whose genomes are patchworks of alleles derived from each parental lineage. In contrast, bimodal hybrid zones contain few identifiable hybrids; most individuals fall within distinct genetic clusters. Distinguishing between hybrid swarms and bimodal hybrid zones can be important for taxonomic and conservation decisions regarding the status and value of hybrid populations. In addition, the causes of bimodality are important in understanding the generation and maintenance of biological diversity. For example, are distinct clusters mostly reproductively isolated and co-adapted gene complexes, or can distinctiveness be maintained by a few ‘genomic islands’ despite rampant gene flow across much of the genome? Here we focus on three patterns of distinctiveness in the face of gene flow between gartersnake taxa in the Great Lakes region of North America. Bimodality, the persistence of distinct clusters of genotypes, requires strong barriers to gene flow and supports recognition of distinct specialist ( Thamnophis butleri) and generalist ( Thamnophis radix) taxa. Concordance of DNA-based clusters with morphometrics supports the hypothesis that trophic morphology is a key component of divergence. Finally, disparity in the level of differentiation across molecular markers (amplified fragment length polymorphisms) indicates that distinctiveness is maintained by strong selection on a few traits despite high gene flow currently or in the recent past.
- Subjects
GARTER snakes; ANIMAL population genetics; ANIMAL genetics; SPECIES hybridization; MOLECULAR biology; GENETIC polymorphisms; MOLECULAR genetics; GENETICS; BIOLOGICAL divergence; MOLECULAR ecology
- Publication
Molecular Ecology, 2008, Vol 17, Issue 18, p4107
- ISSN
0962-1083
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1365-294X.2008.03885.x