Abstract

Speciation is nowadays recognized as a dynamic process in which the respective roles of forces driving ecological differentiation and reproductive isolation can change through time and space. Incipient speciation events are particularly useful to follow such processes that are not tractable when considering well-differentiated taxa. A promising case study was discovered in the pine processionary moth, Thaumetopoea pityocampa, a Mediterranean defoliator of Pinus species, for which allochrony acting as an automatic magic trait was recognized as the major driver of an incipient speciation process. In Portugal, a unique population with a shifted phenology, known as the summer population (SP), co-occurs with a population following the typical life cycle, known as the winter population (WP). We monitored male activity of both populations in the Leiria region, i.e. over the whole SP distribution range using a systematic sampling along two transects, and studied Portuguese WPs at a larger geographical scale to explore their genetic diversity and spatial pattern of differentiation. Results showed that the WPs were genetically more diverse than the SP, with a strong pattern of isolation by distance both at large and small spatial scales, while the SP was very homogeneous over its whole range, without signature of its recent spatial expansion. Contrary to our expectations, no F1 hybrids were identified, even though we found an extended flight period of the SP, overlapping with the beginning of the WP reproductive period. Interestingly, the SP was found to be mostly limited to the sea shore where the WP is now scarce or absent, which could suggest competitive exclusion. Once clearly occurring in a sympatric context, the allochronic differentiation tends to develop nowadays in parapatry.

Highlights

  • Automatic magic traits refer to traits subject to divergent selection, which at the same time contribute to non-random mating (Servedio et al 2011; Nosil 2012)

  • The present study, conducted at a larger spatial scale as compared to Santos et al (2007, 2011a), evidenced a nuclear genetic structure for the winter population (WP) sampled over Portugal

  • Both Principal Component Analyses (PCA) and Structure analyses highlighted successively an east–west a north–south pattern, while a general pattern of Isolation by distance (IBD) was found for the first time over Portugal

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Summary

Introduction

Automatic magic traits refer to traits subject to divergent selection, which at the same time contribute to non-random mating (Servedio et al 2011; Nosil 2012). Classical examples of such traits include phenology when assortative mating occurs via temporal isolation or habitat choice when mating occurs in the preferred habitat (Nosil 2012). They are involved in sympatric or parapatric differentiation processes possibly leading to speciation, because they cause both immediate reduction of gene flow and differential adaptation (ThibertPlante and Gavrilets 2013). We here document a case study of incipient speciation showing a rapid evolution of spatiality with time, the diverging populations moving from sympatry to parapatry

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