TY - JOUR
T1 - Homoploid hybrids are common but evolutionary dead ends, whereas polyploidy is not linked to hybridization in a group of Pyrenean saxifrages
AU - Carnicero, Pau
AU - Kroell, Joelle
AU - Schoenswetter, Peter
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Hybridization and polyploidy are major forces in plant evolution. Homoploid hybridization can generate new species via hybrid speciation, or modify extant evolutionary lineages through introgression. Polyploidy enables instantaneous reproductive isolation from the parental lineage(s) and is often coupled with evolutionary in-novations, especially when linked to hybridization. While allopolyploidy is a well-known and common mecha-nism of plant speciation, the evolutionary role of autopolyploidy might have been underestimated. Here, we studied the saxifrages of Saxifraga subsection Saxifraga in the Pyrenees, which easily hybridise and include polyploid populations of uncertain origin, as a model to unravel evolutionary consequences and origin of hy-bridization and polyploidy. Additionally, we investigate the phylogenetic relationship between the two sub-species of the endemic S. pubescens to ascertain whether they should rather be treated as different species. For these purposes, we combined ploidy-informed restriction associated DNA analyses, plastid DNA sequences and morphological data on a comprehensive population sample of seven species. Our results unravel multiple homoploid hybridization events at the diploid level between different species pairs, but with limited evolutionary impact. The ploidy-informed analyses reveal that all tetraploid populations detected in the present study belong to the widespread alpine species S. moschata. Although of autopolyploid origin, they are to some extent morphologically differentiated and underwent a different evolutionary pathway than their diploid parent. However, the high plastid DNA diversity and the internal structure within eastern and western population groups suggest multiple origins of the polyploids. Finally, our phylogenetic analyses show that S. pubescens and S. iratiana are clearly not sister lineages, and should consequently be considered as independent species.
AB - Hybridization and polyploidy are major forces in plant evolution. Homoploid hybridization can generate new species via hybrid speciation, or modify extant evolutionary lineages through introgression. Polyploidy enables instantaneous reproductive isolation from the parental lineage(s) and is often coupled with evolutionary in-novations, especially when linked to hybridization. While allopolyploidy is a well-known and common mecha-nism of plant speciation, the evolutionary role of autopolyploidy might have been underestimated. Here, we studied the saxifrages of Saxifraga subsection Saxifraga in the Pyrenees, which easily hybridise and include polyploid populations of uncertain origin, as a model to unravel evolutionary consequences and origin of hy-bridization and polyploidy. Additionally, we investigate the phylogenetic relationship between the two sub-species of the endemic S. pubescens to ascertain whether they should rather be treated as different species. For these purposes, we combined ploidy-informed restriction associated DNA analyses, plastid DNA sequences and morphological data on a comprehensive population sample of seven species. Our results unravel multiple homoploid hybridization events at the diploid level between different species pairs, but with limited evolutionary impact. The ploidy-informed analyses reveal that all tetraploid populations detected in the present study belong to the widespread alpine species S. moschata. Although of autopolyploid origin, they are to some extent morphologically differentiated and underwent a different evolutionary pathway than their diploid parent. However, the high plastid DNA diversity and the internal structure within eastern and western population groups suggest multiple origins of the polyploids. Finally, our phylogenetic analyses show that S. pubescens and S. iratiana are clearly not sister lineages, and should consequently be considered as independent species.
KW - Autopolyploidy
KW - Hybridization
KW - Introgression
KW - Morphometrics
KW - RADseq
KW - Saxifraga
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=uab_pure&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:000922666700001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107703
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2023.107703
M3 - Article
C2 - 36632928
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 180
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
M1 - 107703
ER -