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Standing variation rather than recent adaptive introgression probably underlies differentiation of the texanus subspecies of Helianthus annuus.

Authors :
Owens, Gregory L.
Todesco, Marco
Bercovich, Natalia
Légaré, Jean‐Sébastien
Mitchell, Nora
Whitney, Kenneth D.
Rieseberg, Loren H.
Source :
Molecular Ecology. Dec2021, Vol. 30 Issue 23, p6229-6245. 17p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The origins of geographic races in wide‐ranging species are poorly understood. In Texas, the texanus subspecies of Helianthusannuus has long been thought to have acquired its defining phenotypic traits via introgression from a local congener, H. debilis, but previous tests of this hypothesis were inconclusive. Here, we explore the origins of H. a. texanus using whole genome sequencing data from across the entire range of H. annuus and possible donor species, as well as phenotypic data from a common garden study. We found that although it is morphologically convergent with H. debilis, H. a. texanus has conflicting signals of introgression. Genome wide tests (Patterson's D and TreeMix) only found evidence of introgression from H. argophyllus (sister species to H. annuus and also sympatric), but not H. debilis, with the exception of one individual of 109 analysed. We further scanned the genome for localized signals of introgression using PCAdmix and found minimal but nonzero introgression from H. debilis and significant introgression from H. argophyllus in some populations. Given the paucity of introgression from H. debilis, we argue that the morphological convergence observed in Texas is probably from standing genetic variation. We also found that genomic differentiation in H. a. texanus is mostly driven by large segregating inversions, several of which have signatures of natural selection based on haplotype frequencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621083
Volume :
30
Issue :
23
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153877222
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.16008