the salamander E. eschscholtzii spread south from Oregon along both sides of Sierra Nevada mountains that divide coastal and inland California
- over millions of years, the populations gradually diverged
Ring Species
- gene flow connects adjacent populations, but where the ends of the “ring” meet, populations do not hybridize well
hybrid zone
The idea that species could form in the absence of prolonged isolation has been hotly debated for decades
Sympatric speciation occurs when two populations become reproductively isolated “within cruising range” of each other
For this to occur, assortative mating has to arise despite gene flow, and without relying on genetic drift
Scientists have long theorized that disruptive selection on any trait could potentially lead to sympatric speciation, by splitting one population of generalists into two species of specialists
Sympatric speciation: divergence without isolation?
Disruptive selection and assortative mating
Thoday and Gibson (1962)
- started with 4 wild flies that had different # of bristles on their bodies
- their offspring had a normal distribution of bristle #’s
Disruptive selection and assortative mating
Thoday and Gibson (1962)
- started with 4 wild flies that had different # of bristles on their bodies
- every generation, took the 8 flies with the most bristles, and the 8 with the least bristles
- let them interbreed to form the next generation
- after only 12 generations, there were no intermediate flies: all offspring had either lots of bristles (white), or very few bristles (black)
Disruptive selection and assortative mating
What occurred?
- disruptive selection: individuals with high or low bristle # survived to reproduce; average number = no reproduction (you were selected against)
- over time, no hybrid offspring were produced (no flies with intermediate # of bristles)
- assortative mating resulted from selection against hybrids: hairy flies only mated with other hairy flies, and hairless with hairless
- effectively became different species in 12 generations (reproductively isolated)
Controversy!.. no one could reproduce the results of Thoday and Gibson -- including themselves (got lucky the 1st time?)
It was argued that normally, selection and recombination have opposing effects --
- selection: builds up disequilibrium between trait (bristle #) and mating preference for that trait - recombination: removes disequilibrium between a trait and mating preference for that trait
In a sexual population, recombination will prevent disruptive selection from promoting assortative mating and speciation
Disruptive selection and assortative mating
Disruptive selection and assortative mating
hairy prefer selection favors linkage disequilibriumhairy between these 2 traits, since that willmates prevent hybrids from forming
hairy prefer recombination removes disequilibriumhairy between these 2 traits, as crossing over events will keep on separating them
hairless prefer hairless
Rice (1987) and others demonstrated that you could get around this problem if the trait under selection caused assortative mating as a by-product (basically, coincidentally)
-i.e., when assortative mating was a correlated character, instead of a separate trait controlled by other genes
Example: habitat choice
- if individuals mate only in their preferred habitat, then traits controlling habitat choice indirectly control mating preference - recombination can’t tear down this association, since it’s not due to linkage of alleles controlling two different traits
Disruptive selection on habitat choice
The best examples of sympatric speciation are cases of host- switching in specialized arthropods such as insects (herbivores or parasites) Following the introduction of a new host plant by agriculture, some individuals of an insect species will switch onto the new host
Adults are most likely to encounter other adults that prefer the same host plant -- results in assortative mating
If host preference is heritable, their offspring will repeat the pattern -- and a new host race is born
Disruptive selection on habitat choice
The best-studied example is the apple maggot fly, Rhagoletis pomonella This species originally used the hawthorn tree as its host plant
Following the introduction of apples into the U.S. around 1850, some individuals switched from hawthorns onto apples
In only 150 years, hawthorn and apple races became highly genetically differentiated
- but, gene flow still occurs at ~ 6% a year, due to adults that are not perfectly loyal to their original host tree
Case study: the apple maggot fly
Despite persistent gene flow, the two host races are genetically differentiated and appear destined to speciate Natural selection maintains 94% reproductive isolation, mainly resulting from different fruiting times of the two trees
- apples mature 3 weeks earlier than hawthorn fruit
- adults of the apple race hatch earlier to take advantage of new apples, and thus do not overlap with most hawthorn flies This represents a case of incipient speciation...
Case study: the apple maggot fly
Steps in sympatric speciation Result
(1) mate on preferred host promotes assortative mating,
so decreases gene flow
(2) host-specific adaptations selects against hybrids, so build up over time reinforces assortative mating
(3) other adaptations arise complete the speciation that increase pre-zygotic process
isolation, like host fidelity and other mating traits
Sequence for speciation by host shift
Parasites also host shift
Forbes et al. (2009) Science 323: 776
Genetically distinct host races of Rhagoletis flies known from hawthorn (original), apples, snowberries and blueberries
Subsequently shown that specialized parasitic wasps that lay eggs in fly larvae also exist as distinct races, one per fly race
- fly races hatch in the same order as their fruit matures: blueberry > apples > hawthorn fruit
- wasps hatch in same order
As 20% of insects may be parasitic wasps, there is huge potential for speciation by host shift on top of speciation by host shift!
Sympatric speciation by natural + sexual selection
VanDoorn et al. (2009) Science 326: 1704
A recent modelling study reported that sympatric speciation can evolve when disruptive natural selection on any ecological trait was paired with a connected male display trait, and sexual selection in the form of female preference for the male display
- disruptive selection only: population kept average trait value (like beak size)
- add sexual selection: population evolved into 2 distinct forms
disruptive selection only disruptive + sexual selection
Sympatric speciation by natural + sexual selection
simulated males evolved to invest in display, and females evolved to prefer the male display, because display was connected to male’s ability to use either resource extreme
The concept of speciation was introduced by Darwin, in his book On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection
Ironically, for most of the 20th century, little attention was paid to the role of natural selection as a force driving speciation
- focus was on geographical isolation and genetic drift
New studies have shown that natural selection in different environments can be a much more powerful evolutionary force than isolation + time (i.e., genetic drift)
- the debate is now shifting from allopatry vs. sympatry to ecological speciation (due to natural selection) vs. drift
New paradigm: Ecological speciation
Schluter and colleagues have studied stickleback fish in post- glacial freshwater lakes
- receding glaciers left behind young lakes initially lacking fish
- marine ancestors of the stickleback colonized many such lakes, independently but in parallel
- their descendants diversified into 2 forms in each of 6 lakes: (1) limnetic, a small and sleek form that hunts in mid-water
(2) benthic, which is larger and hangs out on the bottom
Case study: 3-spined sticklebacks
Ecological differences result in size differences:
- benthic fish are big + slow; hunt invertebrates on bottom
- limnetic fish are smaller, streamlined hunters of plankton
Parallel speciation in 3-spined sticklebacks
marineancestor
limnetic
benthic
In mating trials, benthic fish mated with other benthic fish; limnetic fish mated with other limnetic fish
Similar fish mated, no matter which lakes they came from
in other words, regardless of genetic similarity – fish from different lakes are not related
Parallel speciation in 3-spined sticklebacks
Rundle et al. 2000
In mating trials, benthic fish mated with other benthic fish; limnetic fish mated with other limnetic fish
Parallel speciation in 3-spined sticklebacks
Benthic x limnetic didn’t produce many successful matings
Size-assortative mating reproductive isolation - big fish like to mate with big fish; small fish with small fish
In this case, preference genes don’t appear to be linked to size-determining genes; fish can just have the allele for “I find my own size to be sexy”, whatever that size is
Thus, no gene flow between the two ecotypes of stickleback, although they are close relatives that diverged only a few thousand years ago in each lake
Ecotype = different forms of one species that have not yet evolved full reproductive isolation (not species, yet)
Parallel speciation in 3-spined sticklebacks