INVESTIGADORES
SOMOZA Gustavo Manuel
artículos
Título:
Biogeography, habitat transitions and hybridization in a radiation of South American silverside fishes revealed by mitochondrial and genomic RAD data
Autor/es:
LILY C. HUGHES; YAMILA P. CARDOSO; JULIE A. SOMMER; ROBERTO CIFUENTES; MARIELA CUELLO; GUSTAVO M. SOMOZA; MARIANO GONZÁLEZ CASTRO; LUIZ R. MALABARBA; VÍCTOR CUSSAC; EVELYN M. HABIT; RICARDO BETANCUR-R.; GUILLERMO ORTÍ
Revista:
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2020 vol. 29 p. 738 - 751
ISSN:
0962-1083
Resumen:
Rivers and lake systems in the southern cone of South America have been widely influenced by historic glaciations events, carrying important implications on the evolution of aquatic organisms including prompting transitions between marine and freshwater habitats and by triggering hybridization among incipient species via waterway connectivity and stream capture events. Silverside fishes (Odontesthes) in the region comprise a radiation of 19 marine and freshwater species that have been hypothesized on the basis of morphological or mitochondrial DNA data to have either transitioned repeatedly into continental waters from the sea or colonized marine habitats following freshwater diversification. New ddRAD data presented here provide a robust framework to investigate biogeographic history and habitat transitions in Odontesthes. We show that Odontesthes silversides originally diversified in the Pacific but independently colonized the Atlantic three times, producing three independent marine-to-freshwater transitions. Our results also indicate recent introgression of marine mitochondrial haplotypes into two freshwater clades, with more recurring instances of hybridization among Atlantic- vs. Pacific-slope species. In Pacific freshwater drainages, hybridization with a marine species appears to be geographically isolated and may be related to glaciation events. Substantial structural differences of estuarine gradients between these two geographic areas may have influenced the frequency, intensity, and evolutionary effects of hybridization events.