Author:
Feng Xueyun,Merilä Juha,Löytynoja Ari
Abstract
AbstractIntrogressive hybridization is an important process contributing to adaptation but challenging to identify, undermining the efforts to understand its role in evolution. On the other hand, many analytical methods assume direct descent from a single common ancestor, and multiple waves of colonisation and admixture can violate their assumptions and lead to seriously biased results. A detailed analysis of 888 whole-genome-sequenced nine-spined sticklebacks revealed a complex pattern of population ancestry involving multiple waves of colonization and introgression across northern Europe. The secondary contact zone between the two recognized lineages was found to be wider than anticipated, displaying a smooth gradient of foreign ancestry with some curious exceptions attributable to freshwater isolates preserving footprints of prehistoric colonisation events. The results provide a back-drop against which introgression and its role in local adaptation can be studied and highlight methodological challenges associated with hidden admixture events.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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