AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding genetic differentiation is key in evolutionary biology, and a study was conducted on three sister butterfly species to analyze their genetic structures in relation to geographical and climatic factors.
  • The research used nuclear and mitochondrial data, revealing species-specific differences in genetic structure influenced by climate and geography, with notable mitonuclear discordance in one species.
  • Results indicated that while all species showed similar colonization histories, their genetic differentiation was shaped by unique combinations of ecological factors, emphasizing the value of comparative studies in understanding genetic variation among closely related species.

Article Abstract

Understanding which factors and processes are associated with genetic differentiation within and among species remains a major goal in evolutionary biology. To explore differences and similarities in genetic structure and its association with geographical and climatic factors in sympatric sister species, we conducted a large-scale (>32° latitude and >36° longitude) comparative phylogeographical study on three Argynnini butterfly species (Speyeria aglaja, Fabriciana adippe and F. niobe) that have similar life histories, but differ in ecological generalism and dispersal abilities. Analyses of nuclear (ddRAD-sequencing derived SNP markers) and mitochondrial (COI sequences) data revealed differences between species in genetic structure and how genetic differentiation was associated with climatic factors (temperature, solar radiation, precipitation, wind speed). Geographical proximity accounted for much of the variation in nuclear and mitochondrial structure and evolutionary relationships in F. adippe and F. niobe, but only explained the pattern observed in the nuclear data in S. aglaja, for which mitonuclear discordance was documented. In all species, Iberian and Balkan individuals formed genetic clusters, suggesting isolation in glacial refugia and limited postglacial expansion. Solar radiation and precipitation were associated with the genetic structure on a regional scale in all species, but the specific combinations of environmental and geographical factors linked to variation within species were unique, pointing to species-specific responses to common environments. Our findings show that the species share similar colonization histories, and that the same ecological factors, such as niche breadth and dispersal capacity, covary with genetic differentiation within these species to some extent, thereby highlighting the importance of comparative phylogeographical studies in sympatric sister species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9544544PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.16594DOI Listing

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