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Hybridization and Transgressive Evolution Generate Diversity in an Adaptive Radiation of Anolis Lizards.

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Interspecific hybridization may act as a major force contributing to the evolution of biodiversity. Although generally thought to reduce or constrain divergence between two species, hybridization can, paradoxically, promote divergence… Click to show full abstract

Interspecific hybridization may act as a major force contributing to the evolution of biodiversity. Although generally thought to reduce or constrain divergence between two species, hybridization can, paradoxically, promote divergence by increasing genetic variation or providing novel combinations of alleles that selection can act upon to move lineages toward new adaptive peaks. Hybridization may, then, play a key role in adaptive radiation by allowing lineages to diversify into new ecological space. Here, we test for signatures of historical hybridization in the Anolis lizards of Puerto Rico and evaluate two hypotheses for the role of hybridization in facilitating adaptive radiation - the hybrid swarm origins hypothesis and the syngameon hypothesis. Using whole genome sequences from all ten species of Puerto Rican anoles, we calculated D and f-statistics (from ABBA-BABA tests) to test for introgression across the radiation and employed multispecies network coalescent methods to reconstruct phylogenetic networks that allow for hybridization. We then analyzed morphological data for these species to test for patterns consistent with transgressive evolution, a phenomenon in which the trait of a hybrid lineage is found outside of the range of its two parents. Our analyses uncovered strong evidence for introgression at multiple stages of the radiation, including support for an ancient hybrid origin of a clade comprising half of the extant Puerto Rican anole species. Moreover, we detected significant signals of transgressive evolution for two ecologically-important traits, head length and toepad width, the latter of which has been described as a key innovation in Anolis.

Keywords: anolis lizards; transgressive evolution; adaptive radiation; hybridization; radiation

Journal Title: Systematic biology
Year Published: 2023

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