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Wiley InterScience

Evolution

Evolution

Volume 62 Issue 10, Pages 2600 - 2615

Published Online: 6 Aug 2008

© 2010, Society for the Study of Evolution



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HALDANE'S RULE IN AN AVIAN SYSTEM: USING CLINE THEORY AND DIVERGENCE POPULATION GENETICS TO TEST FOR DIFFERENTIAL INTROGRESSION OF MITOCHONDRIAL, AUTOSOMAL, AND SEX-LINKED LOCI ACROSS THE PASSERINA BUNTING HYBRID ZONE
Matthew D. Carling 1,2,3 and Robb T. Brumfield 1,2
  1 Museum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803   2 Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803   3 E-mail: mcarli1@lsu.edu
Associate Editor: M. Webster
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 The Society for the Study of Evolution
KEYWORDS
Gene flow • Indigo Bunting • Lazuli Bunting • reproductive isolation • sex chromosomes • speciation

ABSTRACT

Using cline fitting and divergence population genetics, we tested a prediction of Haldane's rule: autosomal alleles should introgress more than z-linked alleles or mitochondrial haplotypes across the Passerina amoena/Passerina cyanea (Aves: Cardinalidae) hybrid zone. We screened 222 individuals collected along a transect in the Great Plains of North America that spans the contact zone for mitochondrial (two genes), autosomal (four loci) and z-linked (two loci) markers. Maximum-likelihood cline widths estimated from the mitochondrial (223 km) and z-linked (309 km) datasets were significantly narrower on average than the autosomal cline widths (466 km). We also found that mean coalescent-based estimates of introgression were larger for the autosomal loci (0.63 genes/generation, scaled to the mutation rate μ) than for both the mitochondrial (0.27) and z-linked loci (0.59). These patterns are consistent with Haldane's rule, but the among-locus variation also suggests many independently segregating loci are required to investigate introgression patterns across the genome. These results provide the first comprehensive comparison of mitochondrial, sex-linked, and autosomal loci across an avian hybrid zone and add to the body of evidence suggesting that sex chromosomes play an important role in the formation and maintenance of reproductive isolation between closely related species.


Received May 1, 2008
Accepted July 10, 2008

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00477.x About DOI

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