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Hybrid ‘superswarm’ leads to rapid divergence and establishment of populations during a biological invasion
Author(s) -
Roy Denis,
Lucek Kay,
Walter Ryan P.,
Seehausen Ole
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
molecular ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.619
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1365-294X
pISSN - 0962-1083
DOI - 10.1111/mec.13405
Subject(s) - biology , genetic admixture , intraspecific competition , genetic divergence , evolutionary biology , genetic variation , population , range (aeronautics) , reproductive isolation , stickleback , genetic algorithm , genetic variability , genetic diversity , ecology , genetics , fish <actinopterygii> , genotype , gene , sociology , fishery , demography , materials science , composite material
Understanding the genetic background of invading species can be crucial information clarifying why they become invasive. Intraspecific genetic admixture among lineages separated in the native ranges may promote the rate and extent of an invasion by substantially increasing standing genetic variation. Here, we examined the genetic relationships among threespine stickleback that recently colonized Switzerland. This invasion results from several distinct genetic lineages that colonized multiple locations and have since undergone range expansions, where they coexist and admix in parts of their range. Using 17 microsatellites genotyped for 634 individuals collected from 17 Swiss and two non‐Swiss European sites, we reconstruct the invasion of stickleback and investigate the potential and extent of admixture and hybridization among the colonizing lineages from a population genetic perspective. Specifically, we test for an increase in standing genetic variation in populations where multiple lineages coexist. We find strong evidence of massive hybridization early on, followed by what appears to be recent increased genetic isolation and the formation of several new genetically distinguishable populations, consistent with a hybrid ‘superswarm’. This massive hybridization and population formation event(s) occurred over approximately 140 years and likely fuelled the successful invasion of a diverse range of habitats. The implications are that multiple colonizations coupled with hybridization can lead to the formation of new stable genetic populations potentially kick‐starting speciation and adaptive radiation over a very short timescale.

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