Locus-specific introgression in young hybrid swarms: Drift may dominate selection

S. Eryn McFarlane, Helen V. Senn, Stephanie L. Smith, Josephine M. Pemberton

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Closely related species that have previously inhabited geographically separated ranges are hybridizing at an increasing rate due to human disruptions. These human-mediated hybrid zones can be used to study reproductive isolation between species at secondary contact, including examining locus-specific rates of introgression. Introgression is expected to be heterogenous across the genome, reflecting variation in selection. Those loci that introgress especially slowly are good candidates for being involved in reproductive isolation, while those loci that introgress quickly may be involved in adaptive introgression. In the context of conservation, policy makers are especially concerned about introduced alleles moving quickly into the background of a native or endemic species, as these alleles could replace the native alleles in the population, leading to extinction via hybridization. We applied genomic cline analyses to 44,997 SNPs to identify loci introgressing more or less when compared to the genome wide expectation in a human-mediated hybridizing population of red deer and sika in Kintyre Scotland. We found 11.4% of SNPs had cline centres that were significantly different from the genome wide expectation, and 17.6% of all SNPs had excess rates of introgression. Based on simulations, we believe that many of these markers have diverged from the genome-wide average due to drift, rather than because of selection, and we suggest that these simulations can be useful as a null distribution for future studies of genomic clines. Future work on red deer and sika could determine the policy implications of allelic-replacement due to drift rather than selection, and could use replicate, geographically distinct hybrid zones to narrow down those loci that are responding to selection.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2104-2115
    Number of pages12
    JournalMolecular Ecology
    Volume30
    Issue number9
    Early online date2021
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2021 May 1

    Subject classification (UKÄ)

    • Evolutionary Biology

    Free keywords

    • anthropogenic hybridization
    • C. Nippon
    • Cervus elaphus
    • genomic cline
    • introgression

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