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Featured researches published by Ian Hutton.


Nature | 2006

Sympatric speciation in palms on an oceanic island

Vincent Savolainen; Marie Charlotte Anstett; Christian Lexer; Ian Hutton; James J. Clarkson; Maria V. Norup; Martyn P. Powell; David A. Springate; Nicolas Salamin; William J. Baker

The origin of species diversity has challenged biologists for over two centuries. Allopatric speciation, the divergence of species resulting from geographical isolation, is well documented. However, sympatric speciation, divergence without geographical isolation, is highly controversial. Claims of sympatric speciation must demonstrate species sympatry, sister relationships, reproductive isolation, and that an earlier allopatric phase is highly unlikely. Here we provide clear support for sympatric speciation in a case study of two species of palm (Arecaceae) on an oceanic island. A large dated phylogenetic tree shows that the two species of Howea, endemic to the remote Lord Howe Island, are sister taxa and diverged from each other well after the island was formed 6.9 million years ago. During fieldwork, we found a substantial disjunction in flowering time that is correlated with soil preference. In addition, a genome scan indicates that few genetic loci are more divergent between the two species than expected under neutrality, a finding consistent with models of sympatric speciation involving disruptive/divergent selection. This case study of sympatric speciation in plants provides an opportunity for refining theoretical models on the origin of species, and new impetus for exploring putative plant and animal examples on oceanic islands.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Speciation with gene flow on Lord Howe Island

Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; William J. Baker; Darren M. Crayn; Roger K. Butlin; Ralf G. Kynast; Ian Hutton; Vincent Savolainen

Understanding the processes underlying the origin of species is a fundamental goal of biology. It is widely accepted that speciation requires an interruption of gene flow between populations: ongoing gene exchange is considered a major hindrance to population divergence and, ultimately, to the evolution of new species. Where a geographic barrier to reproductive isolation is lacking, a biological mechanism for speciation is required to counterbalance the homogenizing effect of gene flow. Speciation with initially strong gene flow is thought to be extremely rare, and few convincing empirical examples have been published. However, using phylogenetic, karyological, and ecological data for the flora of a minute oceanic island (Lord Howe Island, LHI), we demonstrate that speciation with gene flow may, in fact, be frequent in some instances and could account for one in five of the endemic plant species of LHI. We present 11 potential instances of species divergence with gene flow, including an in situ radiation of five species of Coprosma (Rubiaceae, the coffee family). These results, together with the speciation of Howea palms on LHI, challenge current views on the origin of species diversity.


Molecular Ecology | 2009

How sympatric is speciation in the Howea palms of Lord Howe Island

Wiesław Babik; Roger K. Butlin; William J. Baker; Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; Matthieu Boulesteix; Marie-Charlotte Anstett; Christian Lexer; Ian Hutton; Vincent Savolainen

The two species of the palm genus Howea (Arecaceae) from Lord Howe Island, a minute volcanic island in the Tasman Sea, are now regarded as one of the most compelling examples of sympatric speciation, although this view is still disputed by some authors. Population genetic and ecological data are necessary to provide a more coherent and comprehensive understanding of this emerging model system. Here, we analyse data on abundance, juvenile recruitment, pollination mode and genetic variation and structure in both species. We find that Howea forsteriana is less abundant than Howea belmoreana. The genetic data based on amplified fragment length polymorphisms markers indicate similar levels of variation in the two species, despite the estimated census population size of H. belmoreana being three times larger than that of H. forsteriana. Genetic structure within species is low although some weak isolation by distance is detectable. Gene flow between species appears to be extremely limited and restricted to early‐generation hybrids – only three admixed individuals, classified as F2s or first generation backcrosses to a parental species, were found among sampled palms. We conclude that speciation in Howea was indeed sympatric, although under certain strict definitions it may be called parapatric.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2014

Evaluation of genetic isolation within an island flora reveals unusually widespread local adaptation and supports sympatric speciation

Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; Maria Kaye; Céline Devaux; H. Hipperson; Jackie Lighten; Luke T. Dunning; Ian Hutton; William J. Baker; Roger K. Butlin; Vincent Savolainen

It is now recognized that speciation can proceed even when divergent natural selection is opposed by gene flow. Understanding the extent to which environmental gradients and geographical distance can limit gene flow within species can shed light on the relative roles of selection and dispersal limitation during the early stages of population divergence and speciation. On the remote Lord Howe Island (Australia), ecological speciation with gene flow is thought to have taken place in several plant genera. The aim of this study was to establish the contributions of isolation by environment (IBE) and isolation by community (IBC) to the genetic structure of 19 plant species, from a number of distantly related families, which have been subjected to similar environmental pressures over comparable time scales. We applied an individual-based, multivariate, model averaging approach to quantify IBE and IBC, while controlling for isolation by distance (IBD). Our analyses demonstrated that all species experienced some degree of ecologically driven isolation, whereas only 12 of 19 species were subjected to IBD. The prevalence of IBE within these plant species indicates that divergent selection in plants frequently produces local adaptation and supports hypotheses that ecological divergence can drive speciation in sympatry.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2013

A comparative analysis of the mechanisms underlying speciation on Lord Howe Island.

Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; Z. Price; Céline Devaux; H. Hipperson; Carole M. Smadja; Ian Hutton; William J. Baker; Roger K. Butlin; Vincent Savolainen

On Lord Howe Island, speciation is thought to have taken place in situ in a diverse array of distantly related plant taxa (Metrosideros, Howea and Coprosma; Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 108, 2011, 13188). We now investigate whether the speciation processes were driven by divergent natural selection in each genus by examining the extent of ecological and genetic divergence. We present new and extensive, ecological and genetic data for all three genera. Consistent with ecologically driven speciation, outlier loci were detected using genome scan methods. This mechanism is supported by individual‐based analyses of genotype–environment correlations within species, demonstrating that local adaptation is currently widespread on the island. Genetic analyses show that prezygotic isolating barriers within species are currently insufficiently strong to allow further population differentiation. Interspecific hybridization was found in both Howea and Coprosma, and species distribution modelling indicates that competitive exclusion may result in selection against admixed individuals. Colonization of new niches, partly fuelled by the rapid generation of new adaptive genotypes via hybridization, appears to have resulted in the adaptive radiation in Coprosma – supporting the ‘Syngameon hypothesis’.


Nature | 2006

Evolutionary biology: Sympatric plant speciation in islands? (Reply)

Vincent Savolainen; Christian Lexer; Marie-Charlotte Anstett; Ian Hutton; James J. Clarkson; Maria V. Norup; Martyn P. Powell; David A. Springate; Nicolas Salamin; William J. Baker

Arising from: V. Savolainen et al. 441, 210–213 (2006).Stuessy questions our conclusions of sympatric speciation in a case study of palms on Lord Howe Island and proposes an alternative hypothesis, whereby the two Howea species evolved allopatrically when the island was larger and less eroded. Stuessy also argues that low genetic divergence does not necessarily indicate speciation in sympatry. We agree that it is important not to jump to conclusions, but we have good estimates of the size and geological history of Lord Howe Island at the time of the speciation event, and both are fully compatible with sympatric speciation. Stuessy also misinterprets the results from our AFLP (amplified DNA-fragment length polymorphism) genome scan: we did not assert that low AFLP divergence per se is evidence for sympatric speciation, but rather that the distribution of these genetic divergence values across the genome is strongly supportive of speciation with gene flow involving disruptive or divergent selection.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2016

Ecological speciation in sympatric palms: 1. Gene expression, selection and pleiotropy

Luke T. Dunning; H. Hipperson; William J. Baker; Roger K. Butlin; Céline Devaux; Ian Hutton; Javier Igea; Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; X. Quan; Carole M. Smadja; Colin Turnbull; Vincent Savolainen

Ecological speciation requires divergent selection, reproductive isolation and a genetic mechanism to link the two. We examined the role of gene expression and coding sequence evolution in this process using two species of Howea palms that have diverged sympatrically on Lord Howe Island, Australia. These palms are associated with distinct soil types and have displaced flowering times, representing an ideal candidate for ecological speciation. We generated large amounts of RNA‐Seq data from multiple individuals and tissue types collected on the island from each of the two species. We found that differentially expressed loci as well as those with divergent coding sequences between Howea species were associated with known ecological and phenotypic differences, including response to salinity, drought, pH and flowering time. From these loci, we identified potential ‘ecological speciation genes’ and further validate their effect on flowering time by knocking out orthologous loci in a model plant species. Finally, we put forward six plausible ecological speciation loci, providing support for the hypothesis that pleiotropy could help to overcome the antagonism between selection and recombination during speciation with gene flow.


Biology | 2012

Will Climate Change, Genetic and Demographic Variation or Rat Predation Pose the Greatest Risk for Persistence of an Altitudinally Distributed Island Endemic?

Catherine Laura Simmons; Tony D. Auld; Ian Hutton; William J. Baker; Alison Shapcott

Species endemic to mountains on oceanic islands are subject to a number of existing threats (in particular, invasive species) along with the impacts of a rapidly changing climate. The Lord Howe Island endemic palm Hedyscepe canterburyana is restricted to two mountains above 300 m altitude. Predation by the introduced Black Rat (Rattus rattus) is known to significantly reduce seedling recruitment. We examined the variation in Hedyscepe in terms of genetic variation, morphology, reproductive output and demographic structure, across an altitudinal gradient. We used demographic data to model population persistence under climate change predictions of upward range contraction incorporating long-term climatic records for Lord Howe Island. We also accounted for alternative levels of rat predation into the model to reflect management options for control. We found that Lord Howe Island is getting warmer and drier and quantified the degree of temperature change with altitude (0.9 °C per 100 m). For H. canterburyana, differences in development rates, population structure, reproductive output and population growth rate were identified between altitudes. In contrast, genetic variation was high and did not vary with altitude. There is no evidence of an upward range contraction as was predicted and recruitment was greatest at lower altitudes. Our models predicted slow population decline in the species and that the highest altitude populations are under greatest threat of extinction. Removal of rat predation would significantly enhance future persistence of this species.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2016

Ecological speciation in sympatric palms: 2. Pre- and post-zygotic isolation

H. Hipperson; Luke T. Dunning; William J. Baker; Roger K. Butlin; Ian Hutton; Alexander S. T. Papadopulos; Carole M. Smadja; T. C. Wilson; Céline Devaux; Vincent Savolainen

We evaluated reproductive isolation in two species of palms (Howea) that have evolved sympatrically on Lord Howe Island (LHI, Australia). We estimated the strength of some pre‐ and post‐zygotic mechanisms in maintaining current species boundaries. We found that flowering time displacement between species is consistent across in and ex situ common gardens and is thus partly genetically determined. On LHI, pre‐zygotic isolation due solely to flowering displacement was 97% for Howea belmoreana and 80% for H. forsteriana; this asymmetry results from H. forsteriana flowering earlier than H. belmoreana and being protandrous. As expected, only a few hybrids (here confirmed by genotyping) at both juvenile and adult stages could be detected in two sites on LHI, in which the two species grow intermingled (the Far Flats) or adjacently (Transit Hill). Yet, the distribution of hybrids was different between sites. At Transit Hill, we found no hybrid adult trees, but 13.5% of younger palms examined there were of late hybrid classes. In contrast, we found four hybrid adult trees, mostly of late hybrid classes, and only one juvenile F1 hybrid in the Far Flats. This pattern indicates that selection acts against hybrids between the juvenile and adult stages. An in situ reciprocal seed transplant between volcanic and calcareous soils also shows that early fitness components (up to 36 months) were affected by species and soil. These results are indicative of divergent selection in reproductive isolation, although it does not solely explain the current distribution of the two species on LHI.


New Phytologist | 2018

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi promote coexistence and niche divergence of sympatric palm species on a remote oceanic island

Owen Osborne; Rishi De‐Kayne; Martin I. Bidartondo; Ian Hutton; William J. Baker; Colin Turnbull; Vincent Savolainen

Summary Microbes can have profound effects on their hosts, driving natural selection, promoting speciation and determining species distributions. However, soil‐dwelling microbes are rarely investigated as drivers of evolutionary change in plants. We used metabarcoding and experimental manipulation of soil microbiomes to investigate the impact of soil and root microbes in a well‐known case of sympatric speciation, the Howea palms of Lord Howe Island (Australia). Whereas H. forsteriana can grow on both calcareous and volcanic soils, H. belmoreana is restricted to, but more successful on, volcanic soil, indicating a trade‐off in adaptation to the two soil types. We suggest a novel explanation for this trade‐off. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are significantly depleted in H. forsteriana on volcanic soil, relative to both H. belmoreana on volcanic soil and H. forsteriana on calcareous soil. This is mirrored by the results of survival experiments, where the sterilization of natural soil reduces Howea fitness in every soil–species combination except H. forsteriana on volcanic soil. Furthermore, AMF‐associated genes exhibit evidence of divergent selection between Howea species. These results show a mechanism by which divergent adaptation can have knock‐on effects on host–microbe interactions, thereby reducing interspecific competition and promoting the coexistence of plant sister species.

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Tony D. Auld

Office of Environment and Heritage

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H. Hipperson

Imperial College London

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Céline Devaux

University of Montpellier

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