Abstract

Identifying the mechanisms involved in the formation and maintenance of species is a central question in evolutionary biology, and distinguishing the selective drivers of populations’ divergence from demographic processes is of particular interest to better understand the speciation process. Hybrid zones are recognized to provide ideal places to investigate the genetic architecture of speciation and to identify the mechanisms allowing diverging species to maintain their integrity in the face of gene flow. Here, we studied two alpine butterfly species, Coenonympha macromma and C. gardetta, which can be found flying together and hybridizing in narrow contact zones in the southern French Alps. We characterized the genomic composition of individuals, their morphology and their local habitat requirements, within and around a hybrid zone. Genetic diversity analysis at 794 SNPs revealed that all individuals within the hybrid zone were highly admixed, which was not the case outside the hybrid zone. Cline analysis showed that, despite ongoing hybridization, 56 out of 122 loci differentially fixed or nearly so between the two species were impermeable to introgression across the sharp hybrid zone (9 km wide). We also found concordance in cline position and width among genetic, morphological and environmental variation, suggesting a coupling of different reproductive barriers. Habitat characteristics such as the presence of trees and shrubs and the start of the growing season were strongly associated with the genetic variation, and we found evidence of divergence at genetic markers associated with morphology and physiology, putatively involved in visual or environmental reproductive isolation. We discuss the various behavioural and ecological factors that might interplay to maintain current levels of divergence and gene flow between this species pair.

Highlights

  • Hybrid zones are geographic regions where genetically divergent taxa meet and hybridize (Barton & Hewitt, 1985)

  • | 1436 potentially be exchanged between populations through segregation and recombination in hybrids, at rates that, depending on the intensity of selection, can go from virtually zero for the genomic regions highly involved in species isolation and differentiation, to almost free circulation for the “neutral” or not divergently selected parts of the genome (Barton, 1979; Harrison, 1986, 1993; Payseur, 2010; Rieseberg, Whitton, & Gardner, 1999)

  • The analysis of hybrid zones has played an important role in the understanding of the genomic regions under selection and/or responsible for isolation in species that are difficult to breed in the laboratory or long-lived organisms (Derryberry, Derryberry, Maley, & Brumfield, 2014; Lindtke et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Hybrid zones are geographic regions where genetically divergent taxa meet and hybridize (Barton & Hewitt, 1985). Our goal was to evaluate the degree of concordance between ecological, morphological and genetic clines in the hybrid zone and to identify loci and traits potentially involved in species divergence and isolation.

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