AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the phylogenetic relationships among three closely related Drosophila species, focusing on how isolating barriers affect their evolutionary paths.
  • Researchers used a dataset of 29 genetic loci to analyze the relationships, revealing that D. subquinaria is paraphyletic and has complex connections with D. recens and D. transversa depending on geographic location.
  • The findings suggest that both incomplete lineage sorting and gene flow contribute to phylogenetic discordance, indicating that ongoing gene flow from D. recens into D. subquinaria complicates understanding their evolutionary history.

Article Abstract

Inferring evolutionary relationships among recently diverged lineages is necessary to understand how isolating barriers produce independent lineages. Here, we investigate the phylogenetic relationships between three incompletely isolated and closely related mushroom-feeding Drosophila species. These species form the Drosophila subquinaria species complex and consist of one Eurasian species (D. transversa) and two widespread North American species (D. subquinaria and D. recens) that are sympatric in central Canada. Although patterns of pre- and post-mating isolation among these species are well characterized, previous work on their phylogenetic relationships is limited and conflicting. In this study, we generated a multi-locus data set of 29 loci from across the genome sequenced in a population sample from each species, and then, we inferred species relationships and patterns of introgression. We find strong statistical support that D. subquinaria is paraphyletic, showing that samples from the geographic region sympatric with D. recens are most closely related to D. recens, whereas samples from the geographic region allopatric with D. recens are most closely related to D. transversa. We present several lines of evidence that both incomplete lineage sorting and gene flow are causing phylogenetic discordance. We suggest that ongoing gene flow primarily from D. recens into D. subquinaria in the sympatric part of their ranges causes phylogenetic uncertainty in the evolutionary history of these species. Our results highlight how population genetic data can be used to disentangle the sources of phylogenetic discordance among closely related species.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6783338PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13512DOI Listing

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