Publication details

Recent Origin of a Range-Restricted Species With Subsequent Introgression in its Widespread Congener in the Phyteuma spicatum Group (Campanulaceae)

Authors

LARSSON Dennis ŠARHANOVÁ Petra PAUN Ovidiu SCHNEEWEISS Gerald M

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Molecular Ecology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation LARSSON, Dennis, Petra ŠARHANOVÁ, Ovidiu PAUN and Gerald M SCHNEEWEISS. Recent Origin of a Range-Restricted Species With Subsequent Introgression in its Widespread Congener in the Phyteuma spicatum Group (Campanulaceae). Molecular Ecology. Hoboken: Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2025, vol. 34, No 3, p. "e17624", 14 pp. ISSN 0962-1083. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17624.
web https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17624
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17624
Keywords coalescent modelling; dichotomous versus hybridogenic origin; French massif central; phylogeography; range-restricted endemics
Description Understanding the causes of restricted geographic distributions is of major interest to evolutionary and conservation biologists. Inferring historical factors has often relied on ad hoc interpretations of genetic data, and hypothesis testing within a statistical framework under different demographic scenarios remains underutilised. Using coalescent modelling on RAD-sequencing data, we (i) test hypotheses about the origin of Phyteuma gallicum (Campanulaceae), a range-restricted endemic of central France sympatric with its widespread congener Ph. spicatum, and (ii) date its origin, irrespective of its mode of origin, to test the hypothesis that the restricted range is due to a recent time of origin. The best supported model of origin is one of a dichotomous split of Ph. gallicum, confirmed as distinct species, and the Central European Ph. nigrum with subsequent gene flow between Ph. gallicum and Ph. spicatum. The split of Ph. gallicum and Ph. nigrum is estimated at 45-55,000 years ago. Coalescent modelling on genomic data not only clarified the mode of origin (dichotomous speciation instead of a previously hypothesised hybridogenic origin) but also identified recency of speciation as a sufficient, although likely not the sole, factor to explain the restricted distribution range. Coalescent modelling strongly improves our understanding of the evolution of range-restricted species that are frequently of conservation concern, as is the case for Ph. gallicum.

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