Abstract:
Natural hybridization may result in the exchange of genetic material between divergent lineages and even the formation of
new taxa. Many of the Neo-Darwinian architects argued that, particularly for animal clades, natural hybridization was
maladaptive. Recent evidence, however, has falsified this hypothesis, instead indicating that this process may lead to
increased biodiversity through the formation of new species. Although such cases of hybrid speciation have been described
in plants, fish and insects, they are considered exceptionally rare in mammals. They present evidence for a marine
mammal, Stenella clymene, arising through natural hybridization. They found phylogenetic discordance between
mitochondrial and nuclear markers, which, coupled with a pattern of transgressive segregation seen in the morphometric
variation of some characters, support a case of hybrid speciation. S. clymene is currently genetically differentiated from its
putative parental species, Stenella coerueloalba and Stenella longisrostris, although low levels of introgressive hybridization may be occurring. Although non-reticulate forms of evolution, such as incomplete lineage sorting, could explain our genetic results, they consider that the genetic and morphological evidence taken together argue more convincingly towards a case of hybrid speciation. They anticipate that the study will bring attention to this important aspect of reticulate evolution in nonmodel mammal species. The study of speciation through hybridization is an excellent opportunity to understand the
mechanisms leading to speciation in the context of gene flow.
Description:
8 pages, tables, figures, color illustrations, and bibliography.