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Quantitative genetic inheritance of morphological divergence in a lake-stream stickleback ecotype pair: implications for reproductive isolation
Authors:Berner D  Kaeuffer R  Grandchamp A-C  Raeymaekers J A M  Räsänen K  Hendry A P
Institution:Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland. daniel.berner@unibas.ch
Abstract:Ecological selection against hybrids between populations occupying different habitats might be an important component of reproductive isolation during the initial stages of speciation. The strength and directionality of this barrier to gene flow depends on the genetic architecture underlying divergence in ecologically relevant phenotypes. We here present line cross analyses of inheritance for two key foraging-related morphological traits involved in adaptive divergence between stickleback ecotypes residing parapatrically in lake and stream habitats within the Misty Lake watershed (Vancouver Island, Canada). One main finding is the striking genetic dominance of the lake phenotype for body depth. Selection associated with this phenotype against first- and later-generation hybrids should therefore be asymmetric, hindering introgression from the lake to the stream population but not vice versa. Another main finding is that divergence in gill raker number is inherited additively and should therefore contribute symmetrically to reproductive isolation. Our study suggests that traits involved in adaptation might contribute to reproductive isolation qualitatively differently, depending on their mode of inheritance.
Keywords:additive genetic variance  dominance  epistasis  foraging morphology  Gasterosteus aculeatus  genetic architecture  geometric morphometrics  hybrid  line cross analysis
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