Daniel Jeffries

and 5 more

Hybridization plays a pivotal role in evolution, influencing local adaptation and speciation. However, it can also reduce biodiversity, which is especially damaging when native and non-native species meet. Hybridization can threaten native species via competition (with vigorous hybrids), reproductive resource wastage, and gene introgression. The latter, in particular, could result in increased fitness in invasive species, decreased fitness of natives, and compromise reintroduction or recovery conservation practices. In this study, we use a combination of RAD sequencing and microsatellites for a range-wide sample set of 1366 fish to evaluate the potential for hybridisation and introgression between native crucian carp (Carassius carassius) and three non-native species (Carassius auratus auratus, Carassius auratus gibelio, and Cyprinus carpio) in European water bodies. We found hybridization between native and non-native species in 82% of populations with non-natives present, highlighting the potential for substantial ecological impacts from hybrids on crucian carp populations. However, despite such high rates of hybridization, we could find no evidence of introgression between these species. The presence of triploid backcrosses in at least two populations points suggests that the lack of introgression among these species is likely due to meiotic dysfunction in hybrids, leading to production of polyploid offspring which are unable to reproduce sexually. This result is promising for crucian reintroduction programs, as it implies limited risk to the genetic integrity of source populations. Future research should investigate the reproductive potential of triploid hybrids and the ecological pressures hybrids impose on C. carassius.