ϟ
 
DOI: 10.1126/science.1252136
OpenAccess: Closed
This work is not Open Acccess. We may still have a PDF, if this is the case there will be a green box below.

Stick Insect Genomes Reveal Natural Selection’s Role in Parallel Speciation

Víctor Soria‐Carrasco,Zachariah Gompert,Aaron A. Comeault,Timothy E. Farkas,Thomas L. Parchman,J. Spencer Johnston,C. Alex Buerkle,Jeffrey L. Feder,Jens Bast,Tanja Schwander,Scott P. Egan,Bernard J. Crespi,Patrik Nosil

Biology
Evolutionary biology
Genetic algorithm
2014
Natural selection can drive the repeated evolution of reproductive isolation, but the genomic basis of parallel speciation remains poorly understood. We analyzed whole-genome divergence between replicate pairs of stick insect populations that are adapted to different host plants and undergoing parallel speciation. We found thousands of modest-sized genomic regions of accentuated divergence between populations, most of which are unique to individual population pairs. We also detected parallel genomic divergence across population pairs involving an excess of coding genes with specific molecular functions. Regions of parallel genomic divergence in nature exhibited exceptional allele frequency changes between hosts in a field transplant experiment. The results advance understanding of biological diversification by providing convergent observational and experimental evidence for selection's role in driving repeatable genomic divergence.
Loading...
    Cite this:
Generate Citation
Powered by Citationsy*
    Stick Insect Genomes Reveal Natural Selection’s Role in Parallel Speciation” is a paper by Víctor Soria‐Carrasco Zachariah Gompert Aaron A. Comeault Timothy E. Farkas Thomas L. Parchman J. Spencer Johnston C. Alex Buerkle Jeffrey L. Feder Jens Bast Tanja Schwander Scott P. Egan Bernard J. Crespi Patrik Nosil published in 2014. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.