PLoS ONE (Jan 2010)

Genetic variation at nuclear loci fails to distinguish two morphologically distinct species of Aquilegia.

  • Elizabeth A Cooper,
  • Justen B Whittall,
  • Scott A Hodges,
  • Magnus Nordborg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008655
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
p. e8655

Abstract

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Aquilegia formosa and pubescens are two closely related species belonging to the columbine genus. Despite their morphological and ecological differences, previous studies have revealed a large degree of intercompatibility, as well as little sequence divergence between these two taxa. We compared the inter- and intraspecific patterns of variation for 9 nuclear loci, and found that the two species were practically indistinguishable at the level of DNA sequence polymorphism, indicating either very recent speciation or continued gene flow. As a comparison, we also analyzed variation at two loci across 30 other Aquilegia taxa; this revealed slightly more differentiation among taxa, which seemed best explained by geographic distance. By contrast, we found no evidence for isolation by distance on a more local geographic scale. We conclude that the extremely low levels of genetic differentiation between A. formosa and A. pubescens at neutral loci will facilitate future genome-wide scans for speciation genes.