Abstract

BackgroundThe evolution of species boundaries and the relative impact of selection and gene flow on genomic divergence are best studied in populations and species pairs exhibiting various levels of divergence along the speciation continuum. We studied species boundaries in Iberian barbels, Barbus and Luciobarbus, a system of populations and species spanning a wide degree of genetic relatedness, as well as geographic distribution and range overlap. We jointly analyze multiple types of molecular markers and morphological traits to gain a comprehensive perspective on the nature of species boundaries in these cyprinid fishes.ResultsIntraspecific molecular and morphological differentiation is visible among many populations. Genomes of all sympatric species studied are porous to gene flow, even if they are not sister species. Compared to their allopatric counterparts, sympatric representatives of different species share alleles and show an increase in all measures of nucleotide polymorphism (S, Hd, K, π and θ). High molecular diversity is particularly striking in L. steindachneri from the Tejo and Guadiana rivers, which co-varies with other sympatric species. Interestingly, different nuclear markers introgress across species boundaries at various levels, with distinct impacts on population trees. As such, some loci exhibit limited introgression and population trees resemble the presumed species tree, while alleles at other loci introgress more freely and population trees reflect geographic affinities and interspecific gene flow. Additionally, extent of introgression decreases with increasing genetic divergence in hybridizing species pairs.ConclusionsWe show that reproductive isolation in Iberian Barbus and Luciobarbus is not complete and species boundaries are semi-permeable to (some) gene flow, as different species (including non-sister) are exchanging genes in areas of sympatry. Our results support a speciation-with-gene-flow scenario with heterogeneous barriers to gene flow across the genome, strengthening with genetic divergence. This is consistent with observations coming from other systems and supports the notion that speciation is not instantaneous but a gradual process, during which different species are still able to exchange some genes, while selection prevents gene flow at other loci. We also provide evidence for a hybrid origin of a barbel ecotype, L. steindachneri, suggesting that ecology plays a key role in species coexistence and hybridization in Iberian barbels. This ecotype with intermediate, yet variable, molecular, morphological, trophic and ecological characteristics is the local product of introgressive hybridization of L. comizo with up to three different species (with L. bocagei in the Tejo, with L. microcephalus and L. sclateri in the Guadiana). In spite of the homogenizing effects of ongoing gene flow, species can still be discriminated using a combination of morphological and molecular markers. Iberian barbels are thus an ideal system for the study of species boundaries, since they span a wide range of genetic divergences, with diverse ecologies and degrees of sympatry.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0392-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The evolution of species boundaries and the relative impact of selection and gene flow on genomic divergence are best studied in populations and species pairs exhibiting various levels of divergence along the speciation continuum

  • Overall we identified 10 distinct population clusters, which allowed the genetic discrimination of almost all species included in the study, as well as allopatric populations of L. comizo and L. sclateri, and identification of withinpopulation differentiation in L. bocagei from Tejo

  • We provide evidence for a hybrid origin of a barbel ecotype, L. steindachneri, suggesting that ecology plays a key role in species coexistence and hybridization in Iberian barbels (Fig. 10)

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution of species boundaries and the relative impact of selection and gene flow on genomic divergence are best studied in populations and species pairs exhibiting various levels of divergence along the speciation continuum. The study of species boundaries provides invaluable information on the evolution of reproductive barriers and the impacts of gene flow on species divergence. This mechanistic approach is aimed at understanding how gene pools become subdivided and further gene flow is restricted or prevented. As taxa diverge, shared traits can reflect recent common ancestry and incomplete sorting of characters, reestablished gene exchange, or a combination of both. Allele sharing in areas of sympatry due to introgression is expected to increase overall levels of molecular diversity, such as number of alleles and haplotype diversity, a pattern that is not likely to be generated by incomplete lineage sorting. Upon reestablishing some degree of gene flow the resulting patterns of variation will vary on a locus-by-locus basis, depending on impacts of selection and drift and on the architecture of the trait (e.g. [5,6,7,8,9,10,11])

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