Published February 24, 2020 | Version v1

Genomics confirms surprising ecological divergence and isolation in an endangered butterfly

  • 1. University of Kentucky
  • 2. United States Department of Agriculture
  • 3. Osborne Biological Consulting*
  • 4. University of Hawaii at Manoa

Description

Phylogeographic patterns in phytophagous organisms are often contextualized in light of geographic isolation and ecological (host, habitat) specialization. However, assessing the relative impact of these phenomena is not straightforward, even in areas where phylogeography is well-studied, such as the California Floristic Province. Here, we use genome-wide markers to elucidate population genomic and phylgeographic patterns for a group of monophytophagous butterflies in southern California. This group is of high conservation interest because it includes the El Segundo blue, Euphilotes battoides allyni, one of the first insects listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, and a newly discovered population putatively assigned to E. b. allyni. Despite using the same unique host and coastal habitat, our results indicate that the newly discovered populations are not E. b. allyni and are more closely related to geographically proximate populations of the E. battoides group using a different habitat host. Aside from E. b. allyni and the newly discovered populations, the rest of the group shows only fine-scale structure and apparently maintains genetic connectivity throughout southern California, across a vast range of habitats and climates, and on multiple hosts. Thus, habitat and host specialization did not elicit genetic isolation in neighboring populations suggesting that: 1) other phenomena are needed to explain the remarkable and idiosyncratic divergence of these highly restricted, proximate, taxa, and 2) fine-scale genomic markers suggest broader implications for understanding the mechanisms of speciation and reinvestigation of phylogeographic patterns in regions like the California Floristic Province.

Files

Files (66.8 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5882e0e178a3be78c7875cb4273de385
207.7 kB Download
md5:3c859b0b9b0e28be86b748412b9582cd
14.1 MB Download
md5:6984d680265dd7a6836a6c434abf0812
2.1 MB Download
md5:0cfe1e6eb5a72eeb7daf755e14e8d6ec
495.3 kB Download
md5:edaf2c140d046b66cbe8b14e6be78158
497.1 kB Download
md5:49d5d1654e2df6f3875ef950c2819c11
49.4 MB Download

Additional details

Related works