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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Past climate changes facilitated homoploid speciation in three mountain spiny fescues (Festuca, Poaceae)

José Gabriel Segarra-moraguesMaria Luisa López-herranzDavid DraperPilar CatalánPilar CatalánTeresa GarnatjeIsabel Marques

subject

Festuca0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineReproductive IsolationFestucaGenetic SpeciationClimate ChangeNicheIntrogressionBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArticlePolyploidy03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityGenetic algorithmPhylogenyHybridEcological nichePloidiesMultidisciplinaryGeographyGenetic VariationReproductive isolation15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationDiploidy030104 developmental biologyGenetic SpeciationSpain13. Climate actionEvolutionary biologyHybridization GeneticGenome Plant

description

Apart from the overwhelming cases of allopolyploidization, the impact of speciation through homoploid hybridization is becoming more relevant than previously thought. Much less is known, however, about the impact of climate changes as a driven factor of speciation. To investigate these issues, we selected Festuca picoeuropeana, an hypothetical natural hybrid between the diploid species F. eskia and F. gautieri that occurs in two different mountain ranges (Cantabrian Mountains and Pyrenees) separated by more than 400 km. To unravel the outcomes of this mode of speciation and the impact of climate during speciation we used a multidisciplinary approach combining genome size and chromosome counts, data from an extensive nuclear genotypic analysis, plastid sequences and ecological niche models (ENM). Our results show that the same homoploid hybrid was originated independently in the two mountain ranges, being currently isolated from both parents and producing viable seeds. Parental species had the opportunity to contact as early as 21000 years ago although niche divergence occurs nowadays as result of a climate-driven shift. A high degree of niche divergence was observed between the hybrid and its parents and no recent introgression or backcrossed hybrids were detected, supporting the current presence of reproductive isolation barriers between these species.

https://doi.org/10.1038/srep36283