Fig. 1. The Apple Maggot (Rhagoletis pomonella ) was described as
a species when it began to infest apples in the
mid-19th Century. From B.D. Walsh (1867).
It all seemed clear by the 1960s. The origin of new species, or
speciation, was believed to require complete geographic isolation, or
”allopatry.” Gene flow was thought likely to swamp genetic divergence
and prevent the evolution of reproductive isolation. Ernst Mayr in his
monumental book (Mayr 1963), sought to explain away supposed cases of
”sympatric” speciation (i.e. speciation in the face of gene flow) and
sympatric ecological ”races” either as cases of secondary contact after
allopatric divergence, or merely due to phenotypic plasticity with no
genetic divergence component. The paper we discuss here (Inskeep et al.
2021) provides a particularly clear example of a potential sympatric
speciation event in the ”true fruit fly” group, Rhagoletis(Tephritidae). First, however, it is worth briefly describing around 60
years of research into the genus to show why Rhagoletis has
become a model for sympatric speciation.
In graduate school at Harvard in the early 1960s, the young Guy Bush
took a course taught by Ernst Mayr and George Gaylord Simpson. For this
course, he wrote a term paper on sympatric speciation, and following the
doctrine of his day, argued it couldn’t happen. However, while writing
this essay he learned that the Rhagoletis pomonella group of true
fruit flies had been implicated in sympatric speciation, and thus began
the research that led to a large series of studies on R.
pomonella group species and ”host races”, leading up to the paper
reviewed here (Inskeep et al. 2021). Ernst Mayr became a member of
Bush’s PhD committee, and strongly encouraged him in his goal of
carrying out a study of Rhagoletis systematics, because he
thought that Bush would ”put that unresolved example [of sympatric
speciation] to rest once and for all” (Bush 1998).
After studying their behaviour in the field, Bush realized thatRhagoletis and other tephritid fruit flies mated on their host
plant fruits, which come from diverse families of flowering plants.
Males patrol territories on fruits of their host trees and wait for
females to arrive. Bush intuited that a shift in host preference could
thereby result in mating biased among males and females with similar
genetic preferences for new host fruit species, and so reproductive
isolation could result from host plant choice. This form of pleiotropy
is today argued, somewhat inappropriately, perhaps, to be a ”magic
trait” (Gavrilets 2004): if selection favours divergence in ecological
preference, this leads ”magically” to reproductive isolation due to
mating between partners that have similar genetically based ecological
preferences, because both males and females of the divergent form are
liable to exhibit the same new ecological preference.
The Apple Maggot Rhagoletis pomonella is a North American fly
species whose larvae natively feed on hawthorn fruit. It was first
described as a species soon after it suddenly became a pest of apples in
the mid 19th Century (Walsh 1867); see Fig. 1. Apples
had been introduced to North America some 300 years earlier, but in the
19th Century, a wave of advance of this new pest of
apples westwards from the East coast was documented. Walsh was a
correspondent of Darwin and was the first to propose that natural
selection between ”phytophagic varieties” might lead to the origin of
new species. Bush realized that sympatric speciation was after all a
likely hypothesis for this host shift. He was understandably nervous
about advocating for such a ”crackpot idea” in his dissertation,
especially with Ernst Mayr on his committee. Luckily, he managed to
procrastinate finishing his 1964 dissertation and submitted it when Mayr
was out of town, so the defence of his PhD went unopposed. Later Bush
went to the Evolution meetings to give a presentation on his work withRhagoletis only to find that Theodosius Dobzhansky, another
opponent of sympatric speciation, was chairing the session in which he
was speaking. After the talk, nobody made any comments, except for
Dobzhansky who told him: ”Sympatric speciation is like the measles;
everyone gets it, and we all get over it!” (Bush 1998).
The history of the local host switch to apple and wave of advance showed
it clearly happened in sympatry, but there was still little evidence for
the switch to apple being genetic rather than merely phenotypic. Bush,
followed by his students and ex-students (led particularly Jeff Feder
and Stewart Berlocher), then their students and postdocs, have since
studied this system further. At the University of Texas, Bush
collaborated with a chemist, Barrie Kitto, to look for differences in
allozymes between the apple and hawthorn host races, but most of the
enzymes were polymorphic in both, and so the effort seemed a failure.
Bush actually exhorted Feder not to use allozymes (Bush 1998), but Feder
disobeyed his supervisor. By increasing sample sizes he showed clear
allele frequency differences between the host races. Bruce McPheron,
D.C. Smith, and Berlocher, who was by then a professor at University of
Illinois, made similar findings at the same time, and three papers were
then published back to back in Nature proving genetic differences (Feder
et al. 1988; McPheron et al. 1988; Smith 1988). After this breakthrough
many other papers were published documenting in great detail the
hawthorn/apple switch. In particular, it became obvious that as well as
showing genetic differences in host preference, the two host races also
were isolated in time, with adults of the apple race having a genetic
predisposition to emerge a few weeks earlier than the hawthorn race, in
accordance with the different times of fruiting of their hosts. Thus,
the magic trait of host switch also involved some allochronic isolation
between the host races.
However, even by the time of Bush’s original thesis work, it was known
that many other sibling species or host races existed in the R.
pomonella group feeding on a number of other native fruit species (Bush
1966). Most of these species are at least partially sympatric in Eastern
forests of North America, suggesting that sympatric host switches
similar to that in the hawthorn/apple switch likely occurred multiple
times to trigger the rapid radiation of these natural host races and
species (Berlocher 1998; Powell et al. 2013). The current paper is on a
host switch leading to one such example involving the ”sparkleberry
fly,” which feeds on Vaccinium arboretum . This represents one of
the first papers published on Rhagoletis that uses DNA data
resequenced from across the genome, in this case reduced representation
RADSeq data (Inskeep et al. 2021).
In the published version of his PhD thesis, Bush noted some slight
morphological differences, but had included the sparkleberry fly within
the species Rhagoletis mendax which normally feeds on various
species of blueberry and deerberry (like the sparkleberry they are also
members of the genus Vaccinium ). Rhagoletis mendax (the
Latin name means mendacious, which presumably refers to its cryptic
morphological status) is itself closely related to R. pomonellabut just distinct enough to have been recognized as a separate species
(Bush 1966). A sister relationship of sparkleberry flies with
blueberry/deerberry-feeding R. mendax is confirmed here using
current genomic data based both on concatenated data and
coalescent-based species tree phylogenetic reconstructions. Genetic
differences between the two forms are conserved in sympatry as well as
in allopatric populations (Inskeep et al. 2021). Whereas sparkleberry is
found only in the Southern states, where it occurs in sympatry with
blueberry- and deerberry-feeding R. mendax , blueberries andR. mendax are also found Northwards all over Eastern North
America and into Canada.
Was this an example of allochronic isolation? Yes, almost certainly. The
sparkleberry fruits much later in the fall and winter than the highbush
blueberries, which are late summer and early fall fruiters. Infested
fruits were collected from the field from across the ranges of these
species, and controlled experiments reported here investigated the
emergence of flies the following year. The sparkleberry flies track
their host phenology by emerging around two months later than blueberry
flies, even from sites in sympatry, and there is no overlap of emergence
dates and therefore no opportunity for gene flow. This finding
demonstrating a genetic predisposition to different phenology parallels
an earlier study documenting a three-month difference in eclosion times
in field data for the same species (Payne and Berlocher 1995). In
contrast, the three week allochrony between apple and hawthorn host
races of R. pomonella , and the thirty day difference between the
hawthorn race and flowering dogwood fly are weaker barriers, and there
is concomitantly more evidence for gene flow: 4-6% and
~1% per generation, respectively.
Does the allochronic isolation found here lead to an absence of gene
flow? Were there any hybrids between the two? Initially, data suggested
some genetic intermediates with R. mendax on sparkleberry hosts.
However, after analysing these putative intermediates in more detail
together with sequence data from a third species, the putative
intermediates were found most likely to consist of two F1 hybrids
between the sparkleberry fly and a more distant species, the ”flowering
dogwood fly,” rather than R. mendax. In addition, two individuals
of apparently nearly pure flowering dogwood flies were found feeding on
sparkleberry. Unlike blueberry flies, flowering dogwood flies emerge
late in the fall and overlap broadly in areas of sympatry with the
emergence times of sparkleberry flies (in this study, the sympatric site
collected for emergence was Kentucky). The flowering dogwood fly is
sister to the apple and hawthorn flies R. pomonella , and is thus
more distantly related to R. mendax than is the sparkleberry fly.
It is unclear if the hybrids between dogwood and sparkleberry flies ever
lead to longer term introgression, but other hybrids or apparent
intermediates in Arkansas and Alabama suggest gene flow would be
possible. Nonetheless, the two species are undoubtedly stable to this
potential for gene flow, with phylogenetic and genetic evidence for
genetic differences being maintained across their combined range.
Following earlier papers by some of these authors, Inskeep et al.
summarize their paper with a likely history for this radiation. The most
genetically divergent flies treated here are hawthorn feeders from the
Eastern and Western sides of the Sierra Madre mountains in Mexico.
Earlier genetic evidence based on rather few sequenced loci suggested
that large inversions on several chromosomes originated allopatrically
in these Mexican populations, and that these inversions may harbour
differences that led to differences in eclosion time due to different
responses to daylength (Feder et al. 2003; Xie et al. 2008). These
forms, it was proposed, then spread Northwards into the United States
during the Pleistocene, where they hybridized before radiating onto
different fruit species in part via allochronic evolution. The
hybridization could have led to the inversion polymorphisms present in
the North American R. pomonella flies and provided greater
ecological flexibility, allowing shifts in host choice and emergence
timing. Hybridization of ancestral species has been observed to be
associated with rapid adaptive radiations in other systems, for instance
cichlid fish in Lake Victoria (Meier et al. 2017). The switches from
hawthorn to snowberry (Rhagoletis zephyria ), blueberry and
dogwood, and from blueberry to sparkleberry would, like the apple shift,
represent examples of these adaptive shifts.
However, the authors are rightly somewhat hesitant about this history,
which depends on inferring ancestral host plants and areas of species
origin from current host plants, geographic distribution, and phylogeny.
Inferring ancestral character states is a notoriously difficult problem
in comparative analysis, especially when sister species rarely share the
same states (Schluter et al. 1997), as is true here for host plants.
This problem is greatly exacerbated when there is gene flow among the
taxa (Hahn and Nakhleh 2016), which again is likely here. It is not even
clear that hawthorn was the ancestral host. The North American speciesRhagoletis cornivora is even more distantly related to thepomonella clade studied here than the Mexican ”R.
pomonella ” assumed to be ancestral to this ingroup (Xie et al. 2008),
and as its name implies, feeds on dogwoods (Cornus spp.),
including flowering dogwoods. Thus it is quite possible that the hosts
of the common ancestor were dogwoods, not hawthorn, with theR.pomonella -like flowering dogwood fly having an ancestral, not a
derived host plant. Similarly, R. mendax may have evolved to feed
on blueberries from a sparkleberry feeding ancestor, rather than vice
versa.
However, it is clear that R. mendax and the sparkleberry fly are
sisters and that the larval host shift required a switch in timing that
must have greatly reduced gene flow in sympatry. Of course, these
changes may have involved a period of allopatry and the authors did not
claim to prove sympatric speciation. However, because allochrony alone
can provide such a powerful source of genetic isolation, there doesn’t
seem a much greater likelihood of speciation in allopatry than in
sympatry. Given the full current sympatry of the sparkleberry fly withR. mendax , allopatry is an unnecessary hypothesis. The work also
highlights an aspect of rapid evolutionary radiations that is repeatedly
observed in a number of different systems: adaptive divergence is often
followed by convergent evolution leading to renewed hybridization among
related species, which may itself further fuel more adaptive radiation
by continuing to provide recombinant variation (Gillespie et al. 2020).
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