WEAK CROSSABILITY BARRIER BUT STRONG JUVENILE SELECTION SUPPORTS ECOLOGICAL SPECIATION OF THE HYBRID PINE PINUS DENSATA ON THE TIBETAN PLATEAU |
| |
Authors: | Wei Zhao Jingxiang Meng Baosheng Wang Lisha Zhang Yulan Xu Qing‐Yin Zeng Yue Li Jian‐Feng Mao Xiao‐Ru Wang |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, , Beijing, 100093 China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, , Beijing, 100049 China;3. National Engineering Laboratory for Forest Tree Breeding, Key Laboratory for Genetics and Breeding of Forest Trees and Ornamental Plants of Ministry of Education, Beijing Forestry University, , Beijing, 100083 China;4. Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Ume? University, , SE‐901 87 Ume?, Sweden;5. Hebei Academy of Forestry Science, , Shijiazhuang, 050064 China;6. Key Laboratory for Forest Resources Conservation and Use in the Southwest Mountains of China, College of Forestry, Southwest Forestry University, , Kunming, 650224 China |
| |
Abstract: | Determining how a new hybrid lineage can achieve reproductive isolation is a key to understanding the process and mechanisms of homoploid hybrid speciation. Here, we evaluated the degree and nature of reproductive isolation between the ecologically successful hybrid species Pinus densata and its parental species P. tabuliformis and P. yunnanensis. We performed interspecific crosses among the three species to assess their crossability. We then conducted reciprocal transplantation experiments to evaluate their fitness differentiation, and to examine how natural populations representing different directions of introgression differ in adaptation. The crossing experiments revealed weak genetic barriers among the species. The transplantation trials showed manifest evidence of local adaptation as the three species all performed best in their native habitats. Pinus densata populations from the western edge of its distribution have evolved a strong local adaptation to the specific habitat in that range; populations representing different directions of introgressants with the two parental species all showed fitness disadvantages in this P. densata habitat. These observations illustrate that premating isolation through selection against immigrants from other habitat types or postzygotic isolation through selection against backcrosses between the three species is strong. Thus, ecological selection in combination with endogenous components and geographic isolation has likely played a significant role in the speciation of P. densata. |
| |
Keywords: | Cross‐compatibility ecological selection hybrid speciation local adaptation population divergence transplantation experiment |
|
|