TY - JOUR
T1 - Genealogical analysis of replicate flower colour hybrid zones in Antirrhinum
AU - Pal, Arka
AU - Shipilina, Daria
AU - Le Moan, Alan
AU - McNairn, Adrian J.
AU - Grenier, Jennifer K.
AU - Kucka, Marek
AU - Coop, Graham
AU - Chan, Yingguang Frank
AU - Barton, Nicholas H.
AU - Field, David L.
AU - Stankowski, Sean
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2025/8/11
Y1 - 2025/8/11
N2 - A major goal of speciation research is identifying loci that underpin barriers to gene flow. Population genomics takes a ‘bottom-up’ approach, scanning the genome for molecular signatures of processes that drive or maintain divergence. However, interpreting the ‘genomic landscape’ of speciation is complicated, because genome scans conflate multiple processes, most of which are not informative about gene flow. However, studying replicated population contrasts, including multiple incidences of secondary contact, can strengthen inferences. In this paper, we use linked-read sequencing (haplotagging), FST scans and genealogical methods to characterise the genomic landscape associated with replicate hybrid zone formation. We studied two flower colour varieties of the common snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus subspecies majus, that form secondary hybrid zones in multiple independent valleys in the Pyrenees. Consistent with past work, we found very low differentiation at one well-studied zone (Planoles). However, at a second zone (Avellanet), we found stronger differentiation and greater heterogeneity, which we argue is due to differences in the amount of introgression following secondary contact. Topology weighting of genealogical trees identified loci where haplotype diversity was associated with the two snapdragon varieties. Two of the strongest associations were at previously identified flower colour loci: Flavia, that affects yellow pigmentation, and Rosea/Eluta, two linked loci that affect magenta pigmentation. Preliminary analysis of coalescence times provides additional evidence for selective sweeps at these loci and barriers to gene flow. Our study highlights the impact of demographic history on the differentiation landscape, emphasising the need to distinguish between historical divergence and recent introgression.
AB - A major goal of speciation research is identifying loci that underpin barriers to gene flow. Population genomics takes a ‘bottom-up’ approach, scanning the genome for molecular signatures of processes that drive or maintain divergence. However, interpreting the ‘genomic landscape’ of speciation is complicated, because genome scans conflate multiple processes, most of which are not informative about gene flow. However, studying replicated population contrasts, including multiple incidences of secondary contact, can strengthen inferences. In this paper, we use linked-read sequencing (haplotagging), FST scans and genealogical methods to characterise the genomic landscape associated with replicate hybrid zone formation. We studied two flower colour varieties of the common snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus subspecies majus, that form secondary hybrid zones in multiple independent valleys in the Pyrenees. Consistent with past work, we found very low differentiation at one well-studied zone (Planoles). However, at a second zone (Avellanet), we found stronger differentiation and greater heterogeneity, which we argue is due to differences in the amount of introgression following secondary contact. Topology weighting of genealogical trees identified loci where haplotype diversity was associated with the two snapdragon varieties. Two of the strongest associations were at previously identified flower colour loci: Flavia, that affects yellow pigmentation, and Rosea/Eluta, two linked loci that affect magenta pigmentation. Preliminary analysis of coalescence times provides additional evidence for selective sweeps at these loci and barriers to gene flow. Our study highlights the impact of demographic history on the differentiation landscape, emphasising the need to distinguish between historical divergence and recent introgression.
KW - ancestral recombination graphs
KW - barriers to gene flow
KW - flower colour
KW - genealogy
KW - hybrid zones
KW - snapdragon
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012985618
U2 - 10.1111/mec.70067
DO - 10.1111/mec.70067
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105012985618
SN - 0962-1083
JO - Molecular Ecology
JF - Molecular Ecology
ER -