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PARALLEL EVOLUTION OF LOCAL ADAPTATION AND REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION IN THE FACE OF GENE FLOW
Authors:Roger K Butlin  Carl André  Armando Caballero  Jerry A Coyne  Juan Galindo  John W Grahame  Johan Hollander  Petri Kemppainen  Mónica Martínez‐Fernández  Marina Panova  Humberto Quesada  Emilio Rolán‐Alvarez
Institution:1. Animal and Plant Sciences, The University of Sheffield, , Sheffield S10 2TN, United Kingdom;2. Biological and Environmental Sciences‐Tj?rn?, University of Gothenburg, , SE‐452 96 Str?mstad, Sweden;3. Departamento de Bioquímica, Genética e Inmunología, Facultad de Biología, Universidade de Vigo, , 36310 Vigo Spain;4. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, , Chicago, Illinosis, 60637;5. School of Biology, University of Leeds, , Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom;6. Department of Biology, Lund University, , SE‐223 62 Lund, Sweden;7. Faculty of Life Sciences, Manchester University, , Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom;8. Present address: Molecular Oncology Unit, Basic Research Department, CIEMAT, , 40 28040 Madrid, Spain
Abstract:Parallel evolution of similar phenotypes provides strong evidence for the operation of natural selection. Where these phenotypes contribute to reproductive isolation, they further support a role for divergent, habitat‐associated selection in speciation. However, the observation of pairs of divergent ecotypes currently occupying contrasting habitats in distinct geographical regions is not sufficient to infer parallel origins. Here we show striking parallel phenotypic divergence between populations of the rocky‐shore gastropod, Littorina saxatilis, occupying contrasting habitats exposed to either wave action or crab predation. This divergence is associated with barriers to gene exchange but, nevertheless, genetic variation is more strongly structured by geography than by ecotype. Using approximate Bayesian analysis of sequence data and amplified fragment length polymorphism markers, we show that the ecotypes are likely to have arisen in the face of continuous gene flow and that the demographic separation of ecotypes has occurred in parallel at both regional and local scales. Parameter estimates suggest a long delay between colonization of a locality and ecotype formation, perhaps because the postglacial spread of crab populations was slower than the spread of snails. Adaptive differentiation may not be fully genetically independent despite being demographically parallel. These results provide new insight into a major model of ecologically driven speciation.
Keywords:Gene flow  local adaptation  parallel evolution  speciation
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