TY - JOUR
T1 - The Ecology of Hybrid Incompatibilities
AU - Thompson, Ken A.
AU - Brandvain, Yaniv
AU - Coughlan, Jenn M.
AU - Delmore, Kira E.
AU - Justen, Hannah
AU - Linnen, Catherine R.
AU - Ortiz-Barrientos, Daniel
AU - Rushworth, Catherine A
AU - Schneemann, Hilde
AU - Schumer, Molly
AU - Stelkens, Rike
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Ecologically mediated selection against hybrids, caused by hybrid phenotypes fitting poor-ly into available niches, is typically viewed as distinct from selection caused by epistatic Dobzhansky–Muller hybrid incompatibilities. Here, we show how selection against trans-gressive phenotypes in hybrids manifests as incompatibility. After outlining our logic, we summarize current approaches for studying ecology-based selection on hybrids. We then quantitatively review QTL-mapping studies and find traits differing between parent taxa are typically polygenic. Next, we describe how verbal models of selection on hybrids translate to phenotypic and genetic fitness landscapes, highlighting emerging approaches for detecting polygenic incompatibilities. Finally, in a synthesis of published data, we report that trait transgression—and thus possibly extrinsic hybrid incompatibility in hybrids—escalates with the phenotypic divergence between parents. We discuss conceptual implications and conclude that studying the ecological basis of hybrid incompatibility will facilitate new discoveries about mechanisms of speciation.
AB - Ecologically mediated selection against hybrids, caused by hybrid phenotypes fitting poor-ly into available niches, is typically viewed as distinct from selection caused by epistatic Dobzhansky–Muller hybrid incompatibilities. Here, we show how selection against trans-gressive phenotypes in hybrids manifests as incompatibility. After outlining our logic, we summarize current approaches for studying ecology-based selection on hybrids. We then quantitatively review QTL-mapping studies and find traits differing between parent taxa are typically polygenic. Next, we describe how verbal models of selection on hybrids translate to phenotypic and genetic fitness landscapes, highlighting emerging approaches for detecting polygenic incompatibilities. Finally, in a synthesis of published data, we report that trait transgression—and thus possibly extrinsic hybrid incompatibility in hybrids—escalates with the phenotypic divergence between parents. We discuss conceptual implications and conclude that studying the ecological basis of hybrid incompatibility will facilitate new discoveries about mechanisms of speciation.
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U2 - 10.1101/cshperspect.a041440
DO - 10.1101/cshperspect.a041440
M3 - Article
C2 - 38151331
AN - SCOPUS:85203303474
SN - 1943-0264
VL - 16
JO - Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology
JF - Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology
IS - 9
M1 - a041440
ER -