Phylogenomic test of mitochondrial clues to archaic ancestors in a group of hybridizing swallowtail butterflies

Julian R. Dupuis, Felix A.H. Sperling

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Genomics has revolutionized our understanding of hybridization and introgression, but most of the early evidence for these processes came from studies of mitochondrial introgression. To expand these evolutionary insights from mitochondrial patterns, we evaluate phylogenetic discordance across the nuclear genomes of a hybridizing system, the Papilio machaon group of swallowtail butterflies. This species group contains three hybrid lineages (P. brevicauda, P. joanae, and P. m. kahli) that are geographically disjunct across North America and have complete fixation of a mitochondrial lineage that is otherwise primarily found in P. m. hudsonianus, a boreal subspecies of the Holarctic P. machaon. Genome-wide nuclear markers place the three hybrid lineages as a monophyletic group that is sister to P. polyxenes/P. zelicaon rather than P. machaon, although ancient hybridization between a subspecies of P. machaon and the ancestor of these three lineages is also shown by their greater nuclear affinity to P. m. hudsonianus than to other subspecies of P. machaon. Individuals from contemporary hybrid swarms in Alberta, where mitochondrial DNA fixation has not occurred, were more intermediate between their respective parent species, demonstrating diversity in mito-nuclear discordance following hybrid interactions. Our new phylogenetic findings for the P. machaon species group also include: subspecific paraphyly within P. machaon itself across its Holarctic distribution; paraphyly of P. zelicaon relative to P. polyxenes; and more divergent placement of a Mediterranean species, P. hospiton. These results provide the first comprehensive genomic evaluation of relationships within this species group and provide insight into the evolutionary dynamics of hybridization and mitochondrial introgression.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106921
JournalMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
Volume152
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.

Funding

We thank the following individuals for assistance in collecting specimens: S.A. Ae, G. Anweiler, B. Brunet, A. Chichvarken, C.A. Clarke, R. Crnjar, J.J. Dombroskie, S.K. Dvorak, J. Emmel, J.F. Emmel, G. Fagua, P. Feeny, M.S. Fisher, M. Furr, S. Hauch, J. Haugum, C. Hauser, J.R. Heitzman, T. Herig, G.J. Hilchie, W. Houtz, F. Joyce, N.G. Kondla, M. Larrivee, C. Lawson, E. McCloud, D.V. McCorkle, J. Okura, M.A. Peterson, L. Piquemal, P. Ponce, J. Powell, T. Racheli, D. Rubinoff, E. Sperling, T. Sperling, S. Spomer, R. St. Laurent, N. Tremblay, J.T. Troubridge, R. Villa, W. Wehling, J.D. Weintraub, D.A. West, C. Yoon, and E. Zakharov. We thank J. Brock, K. Davis, M. Lödl, T. Neubauer, M. Strangeland, and A. Warren for permission and assistance with photos in Fig. 1 . This research was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant ( RGPIN 217174 ) to FAHS, and an Alberta Conservation Association Grant in Biodiversity ( RES008471 ) and a Canadian Circumpolar Institute, Circumpolar/Boreal Alberta Research Grant ( 330 390200 0N011000001 ) to JRD. Collecting in provincial parks in Alberta and British Columbia was done under permits #10-097 and 105180 , respectively, and all collections on private land were made with the owners’ permission. Figures were created using R v3.1.1 (R Core Team 2018), Inkscape v0.91 ( The Inkscape Team, 2017 ), and GIMP v2.8.16 ( The GIMP Team, 2015 ). Raw sequencing reads are available on NCBI in BioProject PRJNA594039, SRA accessions SRR10663635- SRR10663855, and specimens are vouchered in the E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum at the University of Alberta (see Table S1). We thank the following individuals for assistance in collecting specimens: S.A. Ae, G. Anweiler, B. Brunet, A. Chichvarken, C.A. Clarke, R. Crnjar, J.J. Dombroskie, S.K. Dvorak, J. Emmel, J.F. Emmel, G. Fagua, P. Feeny, M.S. Fisher, M. Furr, S. Hauch, J. Haugum, C. Hauser, J.R. Heitzman, T. Herig, G.J. Hilchie, W. Houtz, F. Joyce, N.G. Kondla, M. Larrivee, C. Lawson, E. McCloud, D.V. McCorkle, J. Okura, M.A. Peterson, L. Piquemal, P. Ponce, J. Powell, T. Racheli, D. Rubinoff, E. Sperling, T. Sperling, S. Spomer, R. St. Laurent, N. Tremblay, J.T. Troubridge, R. Villa, W. Wehling, J.D. Weintraub, D.A. West, C. Yoon, and E. Zakharov. We thank J. Brock, K. Davis, M. L?dl, T. Neubauer, M. Strangeland, and A. Warren for permission and assistance with photos in Fig. 1. This research was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant (RGPIN 217174) to FAHS, and an Alberta Conservation Association Grant in Biodiversity (RES008471) and a Canadian Circumpolar Institute, Circumpolar/Boreal Alberta Research Grant (330 390200 0N011000001) to JRD. Collecting in provincial parks in Alberta and British Columbia was done under permits #10-097 and 105180, respectively, and all collections on private land were made with the owners? permission. Figures were created using R v3.1.1 (R Core Team 2018), Inkscape v0.91 (The Inkscape Team, 2017), and GIMP v2.8.16 (The GIMP Team, 2015). Raw sequencing reads are available on NCBI in BioProject PRJNA594039, SRA accessions SRR10663635- SRR10663855, and specimens are vouchered in the E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum at the University of Alberta (see Table S1).

FundersFunder number
Canadian Circumpolar Institute
Circumpolar/Boreal Alberta Research330 390200 0N011000001
NCBISRR10663635- SRR10663855, PRJNA594039
Alberta Conservation AssociationRES008471
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of CanadaRGPIN 217174
University of Alberta

    Keywords

    • Genotyping-by-sequencing
    • Homoploid hybrid speciation
    • Introgression
    • Papilionidae
    • Population genomics
    • Systematics

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
    • Molecular Biology
    • Genetics

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Phylogenomic test of mitochondrial clues to archaic ancestors in a group of hybridizing swallowtail butterflies'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this