Phylogenomics and phylogeographic model testing using convolutional neural networks reveal a history of recent admixture in the Canarian Kleinia neriifolia
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rincón Barrado, Mario; Perez, Manolo; Villaverde, Tamara; García Verdugo de Lucas, Carlos; Caujapé-Castells, Juli; Riina, Ricarda; Sanmartín, IsabelEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
Canary Islands convolutional neural network Hyb-Seq island biogeography
Fecha
2024-10-19Referencia bibliográfica
Rincón Barrado, M. et. al. Molecular Ecology. 2024;33:e17537. [https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17537]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government, through grants CGL2015-67849- P (MINECO/FEDER), and project PID2019-108109GB- I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ and FEDER ‘A way to make Europe’; MINECO FPI Fellowship (BES-2013- 065389); Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Grant/Award Number: BES-2013- 065389 and CGL2015-67849- PResumen
Multiple-island
endemics (MIE) are considered ideal natural subjects to study patterns
of island colonization that involve recent population-level
genetic processes. Kleinia
neriifolia is a Canarian MIE widespread across the archipelago, which exhibits a close
phylogenetic relationship with species in northwest Africa and at the other side of
the Sahara Desert. Here, we used target sequencing with plastid skimming (Hyb-Seq),
a dense population-level
sampling of K. neriifolia, and representatives of its African–
southern Arabian relatives to infer phylogenetic relationships and divergence times at
the species and population levels. Using population genetic techniques and machine
learning (convolutional neural networks [CNNs]), we reconstructed phylogeographic
relationships and patterns of genetic admixture based on a multilocus SNP nuclear
dataset. Phylogenomic analysis based on the nuclear dataset identifies the northwestern
African Kleinia anteuphorbium as the sister species of K. neriifolia, with divergence
starting in the early Pliocene. Divergence from its sister clade, comprising species
from the Horn of Africa and southern Arabia, is dated to the arid Messinian period,
lending support to the climatic vicariance origin of the Rand Flora. Phylogeographic
model testing with CNNs supports an initial colonization of the central island of
Tenerife followed by eastward and westward migration across the archipelago, which
resulted in the observed east/west phylogeographic split. Subsequent population
extinctions linked to aridification events, and recolonization from Tenerife, are proposed
to explain the patterns of genetic admixture in the eastern Canary Islands. We
demonstrate that CNNs based on SNPs can be used to discriminate among complex
scenarios of island migration and colonization.