Affiliation:
1. Biological Sciences University of Southampton Southampton SO17 1BJ United Kingdom
2. Algae, Fungi and Plants Division, Department of Life Sciences The Natural History Museum Cromwell Road London SW7 5BD United Kingdom
Abstract
AbstractPremiseOceanic islands offer the opportunity to understand evolutionary processes underlying rapid diversification. Along with geographic isolation and ecological shifts, a growing body of genomic evidence has suggested that hybridization can play an important role in island evolution. Here we use genotyping‐by‐sequencing (GBS) to understand the roles of hybridization, ecology, and geographic isolation in the radiation of Canary Island Descurainia (Brassicaceae).MethodsWe carried out GBS for multiple individuals of all Canary Island species and two outgroups. Phylogenetic analyses of the GBS data were performed using both supermatrix and gene tree approaches and hybridization events were examined using D‐statistics and Approximate Bayesian Computation. Climatic data were analyzed to examine the relationship between ecology and diversification.ResultsAnalysis of the supermatrix data set resulted in a fully resolved phylogeny. Species networks suggest a hybridization event has occurred for D. gilva, with these results being supported by Approximate Bayesian Computation analysis. Strong phylogenetic signals for temperature and precipitation indicate one major ecological shift within Canary Island Descurainia.ConclusionsInter‐island dispersal played a significant role in the diversification of Descurainia, with evidence of only one major shift in climate preferences. Despite weak reproductive barriers and the occurrence of hybrids, hybridization appears to have played only a limited role in the diversification of the group with a single instance detected. The results highlight the need to use phylogenetic network approaches that can simultaneously accommodate incomplete lineage sorting and gene flow when studying groups prone to hybridization; patterns that might otherwise be obscured in species trees.
Subject
Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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