RADseq Data Suggest Occasional Hybridization between Microcebus murinus and M. ravelobensis in Northwestern Madagascar

Genes (Basel). 2022 May 19;13(5):913. doi: 10.3390/genes13050913.

Abstract

The occurrence of natural hybridization has been reported in a wide range of organisms, including primates. The present study focuses on the endemic lemurs of Madagascar, primates for which only a few species occur in sympatry or parapatry with congeners, thereby creating limited opportunity for natural hybridization. This study examines RADseq data from 480 individuals to investigate whether the recent expansion of Microcebus murinus towards the northwest and subsequent secondary contact with Microcebus ravelobensis has resulted in the occurrence of hybridization between the two species. Admixture analysis identified one individual with 26% of nuclear admixture, which may correspond to an F2- or F3-hybrid. A composite-likelihood approach was subsequently used to test the fit of alternative phylogeographic scenarios to the genomic data and to date introgression. The simulations yielded support for low levels of gene flow (2Nm0 = 0.063) between the two species starting before the Last Glacial Maximum (between 54 and 142 kyr). Since M. murinus most likely colonized northwestern Madagascar during the Late Pleistocene, the rather recent secondary contact with M. ravelobensis has likely created the opportunity for occasional hybridization. Although reproductive isolation between these distantly related congeners is not complete, it is effective in maintaining species boundaries.

Keywords: Madagascar; Microcebus; RADseq; demographic modelling; genomics; hybridization.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Retracted Publication

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cheirogaleidae* / genetics
  • Hybridization, Genetic
  • Likelihood Functions
  • Madagascar
  • Sympatry

Grants and funding

This study was funded by grants given to U.R. by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (RA 502/20-1 and RA 502/20-3), by the ERA-NET BiodivERsA initiative (No. 2015-138), project: INFRAGECO (Inference, Fragmentation, Genomics, and Conservation) financed on the German side by the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (#01LC1617A), and by Operation Wallacea between 2013 and 2018. In addition, this research was supported by a computing project provided by the North German Supercomputing Alliance (HLRN) to U.R. and T.v.E.