Abstract
In a number of animal species, divergent natural selection has repeatedly and independently driven the evolution of reproductive isolation between populations adapted to contrasting, but not to similar environments1. This process is known as parallel ecological speciation, and examples in plants are enigmatically rare2. Here, we perform a comprehensive test of the ecological speciation hypothesis in an Australian wildflower where parapatric populations found in coastal sand dunes (Dune ecotype) and headlands (Headland ecotype) have repeatedly and independently diverged in growth habit. Consistent with a role for divergent natural selection driving the evolution of reproductive isolation, we found that Dune populations with erect growth habit were easy to transplant across sand dunes, were largely interfertile despite half-a-million years of divergence, and were reproductively isolated from equally divergent Headland populations with prostrate growth habit. However, we unexpectedly discovered that both extrinsic and intrinsic reproductive isolation has evolved between prostrate Headland populations, suggesting that populations evolving convergent phenotypes can also rapidly become new species. Mutation-order speciation2, where the random accumulation of adaptive alleles create genetic incompatibilities between populations inhabiting similar habitats, provides a compelling explanation for these complex patterns of reproductive isolation. Our results suggest that natural selection can drive speciation effectively, but environmental and genetic complexity might make parallel ecological speciation uncommon in plants despite strong morphological convergence.
Footnotes
We have further simplified the paper to focus it on patterns of reproductive isolation alone. The genetic demography of the system will be covered in great detail in a new paper where we have expanded the number of populations, the number of markers, and compare multiple approaches to measure gene flow within and between clades. Our crossing design within and between clades remains the same, and is based on the same logic in the previous version: we are confident that independent evolution of Dune and Headland ecotypes has occurred at least twice between clades, and such comparisons clearly avoid comparing populations of variable divergence.