6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1115

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Dissimilar molecular and morphological patterns in an introgressed peripheral population of a sand dune species ( Armeria pungens , Plumbaginaceae)

P. San SegundoG. Nieto FelinerMarcela RosatoTeresa GarnatjeJosep A. RossellóSònia GarciaG. Alegre

subject

Genome size0106 biological sciencesArmeria pungensIntrogressive hybridisationnrDNA ITS sequencesPopulationIntrogressionPlant ScienceBiologyDNA Ribosomal010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeEvolution MolecularPlumbaginaceaePlastidseducationGenome sizeRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyPlastid captureSequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineReproductive isolationbiology.organism_classificationnrDNA IGS sequencesSympatric speciationEvolutionary biologyHybridization GeneticGenome Plant010606 plant biology & botany

description

Introgression is a poorly understood evolutionary outcome of hybridisation because it may remain largely undetected whenever it involves the transfer of small parts of the genome from one species to another. Aiming to understand the early stages of this process, a putative case from the southernmost border of the Armeria pungens range from its congener A. macrophylla is revisited following the discovery of a subpopulation that does not show phenotypic signs of introgression and resembles typical A. pungens. We analysed morphometrics, nuclear ribosomal DNA ITS and plastid DNA (trnL‐trnF) sequences, genome size, 45S and 5S rDNA loci‐FISH data and nrDNA IGS sequences. Within the study site, most individuals match morphologies of either of the two hybridising species, particularly the new subpopulation, with intermediate phenotypes being scarce. This pattern does not fully fit molecular evidence revealing two ITS ribotypes co‐occurring intragenomically in most plants from the study site and one single plastid haplotype. Genome size and structural features of the IGS sequences both indicate that A. pungens from the study site is genetically more similar to its sympatric congener than to the remainder of its conspecifics. Introgression of A. macrophylla into A. pungens and plastid capture explain all the evidence analysed. However, important features to understand the origin and fate of the introgressed population, such as the degree and direction of introgression, which are important for understanding early stages of hybridisation in plants with low reproductive barriers, should be addressed with new data.

https://doi.org/10.1111/plb.13035