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Natural selection maintains species despite widespread hybridization in the desert shrub Encelia

Christopher D DiVittorio, Sonal Singhal, Adam B Roddy, Felipe Zapata, David D Ackerly, Bruce G Baldwin, Craig R Brodersen, Alberto Burquez, Paul VA Fine, Mayra Padilla Flores, Elizabeth Solis, Jaime Morales-Villavicencio, David Morales-Arce, Don W Kyhos
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.23.917021
Christopher D DiVittorio
aDepartment of Integrative Biology, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
bTruBreed Technologies, 5627 Telegraph Avenue, Suite 420, Oakland, CA, 94609, USA
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  • For correspondence: chrisdivittorio@gmail.com sonal.singhal1@gmail.com
Sonal Singhal
cDepartment of Biology, 1000 E Victoria Street, CSU Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA 90747, USA
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  • For correspondence: chrisdivittorio@gmail.com sonal.singhal1@gmail.com
Adam B Roddy
dSchool of Forestry and Environmental Studies, 195 Prospect Street, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA
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Felipe Zapata
eDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 612 Charles E. Young Dr. South, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, 90095, USA
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David D Ackerly
aDepartment of Integrative Biology, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
fJepson Herbarium, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Building #2465, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
gDepartment of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, 101 Giannini Hall, University of California, Berkeley CA 94720, USA
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Bruce G Baldwin
aDepartment of Integrative Biology, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
fJepson Herbarium, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Building #2465, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
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Craig R Brodersen
dSchool of Forestry and Environmental Studies, 195 Prospect Street, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06511, USA
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Alberto Burquez
hInstituto de Ecología, Universidad Autónoma de México, Apartado Postal 1354, Hermosillo, Sonora, 83000, México
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Paul VA Fine
aDepartment of Integrative Biology, 3040 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA
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Mayra Padilla Flores
cDepartment of Biology, 1000 E Victoria Street, CSU Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA 90747, USA
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Elizabeth Solis
cDepartment of Biology, 1000 E Victoria Street, CSU Dominguez Hills, Carson, CA 90747, USA
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Jaime Morales-Villavicencio
iReserva de la Biosfera el Vizcaíno, Domingo Carballo Félix s/n, Guerrero Negro, BCS, 23941, México
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David Morales-Arce
jBenito Juárez s/n, Colonia Barrio La Punta, Bahia Asunción, BCS, 23960, México
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Don W Kyhos
kDepartment of Plant Biology, 1002 Life Sciences Addition, One Shields Avenue, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616, USA
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ABSTRACT

Natural selection is an important driver of genetic and phenotypic differentiation between species. A powerful way to test the role of natural selection in the formation and maintenance of species is to study species complexes in which potential gene flow is high but realized gene flow is low. For a recent radiation of New World desert shrubs (Encelia: Asteraceae), we use fine-scale geographic sampling and population genomics to determine patterns of gene flow across two hybrid zones formed between two independent pairs of species with parapatric distributions. After finding evidence for extremely strong selection at both hybrid zones, we use a combination of field experiments, high-resolution imaging, and physiological measurements to determine the ecological basis for selection at one of the hybrid zones. Our results identify multiple ecological mechanisms of selection (drought, salinity, herbivory, and burial) that together are sufficient to maintain species boundaries despite high rates of hybridization. Given that multiple pairs of species hybridize at ecologically divergent parapatric boundaries in the adaptive radiation of Encelia, such mechanisms may maintain species boundaries throughout this group.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT In Baja California, the deserts meet the coastal dunes in a narrow transition visible even from satellite images. We study two species pairs of desert shrubs (Encelia) that occur across this transition. Although these species can interbreed, they remain distinct. Using a combination of genetics, field experiments, 3D-imaging, and physiological measurements, we show that natural selection counteracts the homogenizing effects of gene exchange. The different habitats of these species create multiple mechanisms of selection - drought, salinity, herbivory, and burial, which together maintain these species in their native habitats and their hybrids in intermediate habitats. This study illustrates how environmental factors influence traits and fitness and how this in turn maintain species, highlighting the importance of natural selection in speciation.

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Posted January 24, 2020.
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Natural selection maintains species despite widespread hybridization in the desert shrub Encelia
Christopher D DiVittorio, Sonal Singhal, Adam B Roddy, Felipe Zapata, David D Ackerly, Bruce G Baldwin, Craig R Brodersen, Alberto Burquez, Paul VA Fine, Mayra Padilla Flores, Elizabeth Solis, Jaime Morales-Villavicencio, David Morales-Arce, Don W Kyhos
bioRxiv 2020.01.23.917021; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.23.917021
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Natural selection maintains species despite widespread hybridization in the desert shrub Encelia
Christopher D DiVittorio, Sonal Singhal, Adam B Roddy, Felipe Zapata, David D Ackerly, Bruce G Baldwin, Craig R Brodersen, Alberto Burquez, Paul VA Fine, Mayra Padilla Flores, Elizabeth Solis, Jaime Morales-Villavicencio, David Morales-Arce, Don W Kyhos
bioRxiv 2020.01.23.917021; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.23.917021

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