Topology Testing and Demographic Modeling Illuminate a Novel Speciation Pathway in the Greater Caribbean Sea Following the Formation of the Isthmus of Panama

Author:

Titus Benjamin M123ORCID,Gibbs H Lisle3,Simões Nuno456,Daly Marymegan3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama , 1325 Science and Engineering Complex, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 , USA

2. Dauphin Island Sea Lab , 101 Bienville Blvd, Dauphin Island, AL 36528 ,  USA

3. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University , 1315 Kinnear Rd, Columbus, OH 43212 ,  USA

4. Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico-Sisal , Puerto de abrigo s/n, Sisal, CP 97356 Yucatán , Mexico

5. International Chair for Coastal and Marine Studies in Mexico, Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies, Texas A&M University , 6300 Ocean Dr, Corpus Christi, TX 78412 , USA

6. Laboratorio Nacional de Resilencia Costera (LANRESC, CONACYT) , 97356 Sisal, Yucata´n , Mexico

Abstract

Abstract Recent genomic analyses have highlighted the prevalence of speciation with gene flow in many taxa and have underscored the importance of accounting for these reticulate evolutionary processes when constructing species trees and generating parameter estimates. This is especially important for deepening our understanding of speciation in the sea where fast-moving ocean currents, expanses of deep water, and periodic episodes of sea level rise and fall act as soft and temporary allopatric barriers that facilitate both divergence and secondary contact. Under these conditions, gene flow is not expected to cease completely while contemporary distributions are expected to differ from historical ones. Here, we conduct range-wide sampling for Pederson’s cleaner shrimp (Ancylomenes pedersoni), a species complex from the Greater Caribbean that contains three clearly delimited mitochondrial lineages with both allopatric and sympatric distributions. Using mtDNA barcodes and a genomic ddRADseq approach, we combine classic phylogenetic analyses with extensive topology testing and demographic modeling (10 site frequency replicates × 45 evolutionary models × 50 model simulations/replicate = 22,500 simulations) to test species boundaries and reconstruct the evolutionary history of what was expected to be a simple case study. Instead, our results indicate a history of allopatric divergence, secondary contact, introgression, and endemic hybrid speciation that we hypothesize was driven by the final closure of the Isthmus of Panama and the strengthening of the Gulf Stream Current ~3.5 Ma. The history of this species complex recovered by model-based methods that allow reticulation differs from that recovered by standard phylogenetic analyses and is unexpected given contemporary distributions. The geologically and biologically meaningful insights gained by our model selection analyses illuminate what is likely a novel pathway of species formation not previously documented that resulted from one of the most biogeographically significant events in Earth’s history.

Funder

National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement

Operation Wallacea, American Philosophical Society

International Society for Reef Studies Graduate Fellowship

PADI Foundation Grant

American Museum of Natural History Lerner Gray Funds

The Ohio State University Presidential Fellowship

Trautman Fund of The OSU Museum of Biological Diversity

The Ohio State Universit

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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