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Estimating the temporal and spatial extent of gene flow among sympatric lizard populations (genus Sceloporus) in the southern Mexican highlands
Authors:Jared A Grummer  Martha L Calderón‐Espinosa  Adrián Nieto‐Montes de Oca  Eric N Smith  Fausto R Méndez‐de la Cruz  Adam D Leaché
Institution:1. Department of Biology and Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;2. Instituto de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Sede Bogotá, Colombia;3. Museo de Zoología and Departmento de Biología Evolutiva, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, México, Distrito Federal, México;4. Amphibian & Reptile Diversity Research Center, Department of Biology, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX, USA;5. Laboratorio de Herpetología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, México, D. F., México
Abstract:Interspecific gene flow is pervasive throughout the tree of life. Although detecting gene flow between populations has been facilitated by new analytical approaches, determining the timing and geography of hybridization has remained difficult, particularly for historical gene flow. A geographically explicit phylogenetic approach is needed to determine the overlap of ancestral populations. In this study, we performed population genetic analyses, species delimitation, simulations and a recently developed approach of species tree diffusion to infer the phylogeographic history, timing and geographic extent of gene flow in lizards of the Sceloporus spinosus group. The two species in this group, S. spinosus and S. horridus, are distributed in eastern and western portions of Mexico, respectively, but populations of these species are sympatric in the southern Mexican highlands. We generated data consisting of three mitochondrial genes and eight nuclear loci for 148 and 68 individuals, respectively. We delimited six lineages in this group, but found strong evidence of mito‐nuclear discordance in sympatric populations of S. spinosus and S. horridus owing to mitochondrial introgression. We used coalescent simulations to differentiate ancestral gene flow from secondary contact, but found mixed support for these two models. Bayesian phylogeography indicated more than 60% range overlap between ancestral S. spinosus and S. horridus populations since the time of their divergence. Isolation–migration analyses, however, revealed near‐zero levels of gene flow between these ancestral populations. Interpreting results from both simulations and empirical data indicate that despite a long history of sympatry among these two species, gene flow in this group has only recently occurred.
Keywords:Bayesian phylogeography  coalescent simulations  hybridization  gene flow  Mexico  mito‐nuclear discordance  species delimitation
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