Abstract

Understanding the factors that contribute to the generation of reproductively isolated forms is a fundamental goal of evolutionary biology. Cryptic species are an especially interesting challenge to study in this context since they lack obvious morphological differentiation that provides clues to adaptive divergence that may drive reproductive isolation. Geographical isolation in refugial areas during glacial cycling is known to be important for generating genetically divergent populations, but its role in the origination of new species is still not fully understood and likely to be situation dependent. We combine analysis of 35,434 single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with environmental niche modeling (ENM) to investigate genomic and ecological divergence in three cryptic species formerly classified as the field vole (Microtus agrestis). The SNPs demonstrate high genomic divergence (pairwise F ST values of 0.45–0.72) and little evidence of gene flow among the three field vole cryptic species, and we argue that genetic drift may have been a particularly important mechanism for divergence in the group. The ENM reveals three areas as potential glacial refugia for the cryptic species and differing climatic niches, although with spatial overlap between species pairs. This evidence underscores the role that glacial cycling has in promoting genetic differentiation and reproductive isolation by subdivision into disjunct distributions at glacial maxima in areas relatively close to ice sheets. Future investigation of the intrinsic barriers to gene flow between the field vole cryptic species is required to fully assess the mechanisms that contribute to reproductive isolation. In addition, the Portuguese field vole (M. rozianus) shows a high inbreeding coefficient and a restricted climatic niche, and warrants investigation into its conservation status.

Highlights

  • Genetic variation in contemporary taxa is often heterogeneous across space, with a patchwork of genetically distinct lineages that have been shaped by various historical and ecological processes (Avise, 2000; Moritz, 1994)

  • We investigated the rapid divergence of the field vole cryptic species by using genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS; Elshire et al, 2011) to sequence anonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the genome of 83 individuals

  • In order to assess the putative climatic basis of differentiation, we performed environmental niche modeling (ENM) to estimate the climate favorability for the field vole at Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and, we studied the biogeographic relationships among its cryptic species at present

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Genetic variation in contemporary taxa is often heterogeneous across space, with a patchwork of genetically distinct lineages that have been shaped by various historical and ecological processes (Avise, 2000; Moritz, 1994). Within the short-tailed field vole, six genetic lineages split during the Younger Dryas ~ 12,000 years ago and subsequently expanded to fill this range (Herman & Searle, 2011) The dates for these splits are based on robust mtDNA molecular clock rate calibrated from the dates of postglacial ice sheet retreat and sea level rise that limited the potential time of colonization of Britain (Herman et al, 2014) and consistent with ancient DNA analysis of another Microtus species (Martínková et al, 2013). The field vole cryptic species complex includes a hierarchy of differentiation caused by lineage splits associated with different climatic events and locations during the Late Pleistocene, making it an excellent system to understand the basis of rapid speciation and the role of recent glacial cycles in population divergence and speciation. To filter out SNPs from paralogous loci, SNPs were excluded if they showed significant (p < .05) excess heterozygosity and deviation from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium as calculated using vcftools (Danecek et al, 2011)

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call