RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Whole-genome analysis of multiple wood ant population pairs supports similar speciation histories, but different degrees of gene flow, across their European range JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2021.03.10.434741 DO 10.1101/2021.03.10.434741 A1 Beatriz Portinha A1 Amaury Avril A1 Christian Bernasconi A1 Heikki Helanterä A1 Josie Monaghan A1 Bernhard Seifert A1 Vitor C. Sousa A1 Jonna Kulmuni A1 Pierre Nouhaud YR 2021 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2021/03/11/2021.03.10.434741.abstract AB The application of demographic history modeling and inference to the study of divergence between species is becoming a cornerstone of speciation genomics. The demographic history is usually reconstructed by analysing a single population from each species, assuming that the divergence history inferred between these populations represents the actual speciation history. However, this assumption is rarely explicitly tested, and it may not be met when species diverge with gene flow. For instance, secondary contact between two species after a range expansion may be confined into a specific geographic region. In this study, we tested to what extent the divergence history inferred from two heterospecific populations would vary depending on their geographic locations, using mound-building red wood ants. The wood ant species Formica polyctena and F. aquilonia have contrasting distributions in Europe and naturally hybridize in Finland. We first performed whole-genome resequencing of 20 individuals sampled in multiple populations across both species ranges. We then reconstructed the divergence histories of distinct heterospecific population pairs using a coalescent-based approach. We found that the analysis of these different population pairs always supported a scenario of divergence with gene flow, suggesting that species divergence started in the Pleistocene (ca. 500 kya) and occurred with continuous asymmetrical gene flow from F. aquilonia to F. polyctena until a recent time, when migration stopped (2-19 kya, depending on the population pair considered). However, we found support for contemporary gene flow in the sympatric population pair from Finland, where hybrids have been described. Overall, our results suggest that divergence histories reconstructed from a few individuals may be reliable and applicable at the species level. Nonetheless, the geographical context of populations chosen to represent their species should be taken into account, as it may affect estimates of migration rates between species when gene flow is heterogeneous across their geographical ranges.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.