Abstract
Steep genetic clines resulting from recent secondary contact between previously isolated taxa can either gradually erode over time or be stabilized by factors such as ecological selection or selection against hybrids. We used patterns of variation in 30 nuclear and two mitochondrial SNPs to examine the factors that could be involved in stabilizing clines across a hybrid zone between two subspecies of the Atlantic killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus. Increased heterozygote deficit and cytonuclear disequilibrium in populations near the center of the mtDNA cline suggest that some form of reproductive isolation such as assortative mating or selection against hybrids may be acting in this hybrid zone. However, only a small number of loci exhibited these signatures, suggesting locus‐specific, rather than genomewide, factors. Fourteen of the 32 loci surveyed had cline widths inconsistent with neutral expectations, with two SNPs in the mitochondrial genome exhibiting the steepest clines. Seven of the 12 putatively non‐neutral nuclear clines were for SNPs in genes related to oxidative metabolism. Among these putatively non‐neutral nuclear clines, SNPs in two nuclear‐encoded mitochondrial genes (SLC25A3 and HDDC2), as well as SNPs in the myoglobin, 40S ribosomal protein S17, and actin‐binding LIM protein genes, had clines that were coincident and concordant with the mitochondrial clines. When hybrid index was calculated using this subset of loci, the frequency distribution of hybrid indices for a population located at the mtDNA cline center was non‐unimodal, suggesting selection against advanced‐generation hybrids, possibly due to effects on processes involved in oxidative metabolism.
Highlights
When two previously isolated taxa come into contact, they may transiently form a hybrid zone, but in the absence of intrinsic or extrinsic mechanisms that maintain reproductive isolation the hybrid zone will gradually degrade as the taxa merge due to interbreeding (Barton and Hewitt 1985, 1989)
The two lactate dehydrogenase-B (Ldh-B) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were in linkage disequilibrium in all but the three southernmost populations, and the two hemoglobin genes were in significant linkage disequilibrium in 9 of the 15 populations studied
There was no evidence of elevated linkage disequilibrium (LD) within the putative contact zone, as there was no significant difference in the number of loci exhibiting positive Rij in hybrid zone populations compared to locations to the north or south of the zone (Kruskal–Wallis nonparametric ANOVA P = 0.3473)
Summary
When two previously isolated taxa come into contact, they may transiently form a hybrid zone, but in the absence of intrinsic or extrinsic mechanisms that maintain reproductive isolation the hybrid zone will gradually degrade as the taxa merge due to interbreeding (Barton and Hewitt 1985, 1989). Endogenous selection due to incompatibilities that cause hybrid inviability, sterility, or decreased fitness can maintain a hybrid zone, irrespective of environmental factors (Dobzhansky 1940; Moore and Price 1993). Or in addition, exogenous environmental selection can stabilize hybrid zones along an environmental gradient if parental taxa and/or offspring are differentially suited to divergent habitats (Moore and Price 1993). Examining clines in allele frequencies across a hybrid zone can be a powerful way to detect genes that are responding to endogenous or exogenous selection, as these processes are likely to result in clines in selected loci that are steeper than the neutral clines (Vasem€agi 2006).
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