Abstract

Understanding how new species arise through the progressive establishment of reproductive isolation (RI) barriers between diverging populations is a major goal in Evolutionary Biology. An important result of speciation genomics studies is that genomic regions involved in RI frequently harbor anciently diverged haplotypes that predate the reconstructed history of species divergence. The possible origins of these old alleles remain much debated, as they relate to contrasting mechanisms of speciation that are not yet fully understood. In the European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax), the genomic regions involved in RI between Atlantic and Mediterranean lineages are enriched for anciently diverged alleles of unknown origin. Here, we used haplotype‐resolved whole‐genome sequences to test whether divergent haplotypes could have originated from a closely related species, the spotted sea bass (Dicentrarchus punctatus). We found that an ancient admixture event between D. labrax and D. punctatus is responsible for the presence of shared derived alleles that segregate at low frequencies in both lineages of D. labrax. An exception to this was found within regions involved in RI between the two D. labrax lineages. In those regions, archaic tracts originating from D. punctatus locally reached high frequencies or even fixation in Atlantic genomes but were almost absent in the Mediterranean. We showed that the ancient admixture event most likely occurred between D. punctatus and the D. labrax Atlantic lineage, while Atlantic and Mediterranean D. labrax lineages were experiencing allopatric isolation. Our results suggest that local adaptive introgression and/or the resolution of genomic conflicts provoked by ancient admixture have probably contributed to the establishment of RI between the two D. labrax lineages.

Highlights

  • Speciation is often viewed as a progressive accumulation of reproductive isolation (RI) barriers between two diverging lineages through time

  • PHYLOGENOMIC ANALYSIS We reconstructed the genetic relationships among the three Moronid species used in our study: the striped bass (M. saxatilis), the spotted sea bass (D. punctatus), and the European sea bass (D. labrax), which is further subdivided into two partially reproductively isolated populations: the Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea bass lineages

  • Our results show that divergent haplotypes that were introgressed from D. punctatus about 80,000 year ago have contributed to the strengthening of nascent RI between Atlantic and Mediterranean D. labrax lineages

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Summary

Introduction

Speciation is often viewed as a progressive accumulation of reproductive isolation (RI) barriers between two diverging lineages through time. Introgressed foreign alleles that were locally driven to high frequencies in the Atlantic have subsequently experienced reduced gene flow between the Atlantic and Mediterranean populations during the postglacial secondary contact, contributing to increased RI between two sea bass lineages These results support the view (SSE) and European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB). Polymorphism has possibly been maintained over the long term in the ancestral population before being differentially sorted among the descendant lineages (Guerrero and Hahn 2017) This hypothesis has been proposed to explain the excess of haplotype divergence in the aforementioned examples (Colosimo et al 2005; Han et al 2017; Fuller et al 2018). Past admixture is increasingly recognized as a source of anciently diverged alleles in contemporary genomes

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