Sotola Evolutionary Genetics Group

Understanding hybridization and ecological adaptation through evolutionary genetics to inform conservation and management.

Does Asymmetric Reproductive Isolation Predict the Direction of Introgression in Plants?


Journal article


N. H. Martin, Alexander S Zalmat, Bailey S. Ellis, Sophia McGarvey, Kayla Simmons-Frazier, Katelin Mancusi, V. A. Sotola
Genes, 2025

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APA   Click to copy
Martin, N. H., Zalmat, A. S., Ellis, B. S., McGarvey, S., Simmons-Frazier, K., Mancusi, K., & Sotola, V. A. (2025). Does Asymmetric Reproductive Isolation Predict the Direction of Introgression in Plants? Genes.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Martin, N. H., Alexander S Zalmat, Bailey S. Ellis, Sophia McGarvey, Kayla Simmons-Frazier, Katelin Mancusi, and V. A. Sotola. “Does Asymmetric Reproductive Isolation Predict the Direction of Introgression in Plants?” Genes (2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Martin, N. H., et al. “Does Asymmetric Reproductive Isolation Predict the Direction of Introgression in Plants?” Genes, 2025.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{n2025a,
  title = {Does Asymmetric Reproductive Isolation Predict the Direction of Introgression in Plants?},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {Genes},
  author = {Martin, N. H. and Zalmat, Alexander S and Ellis, Bailey S. and McGarvey, Sophia and Simmons-Frazier, Kayla and Mancusi, Katelin and Sotola, V. A.}
}

Abstract

The evolution of reproductive isolation (RI) results in the reduction of interspecific hybridization and the maintenance of species boundaries. Asymmetries in RI, where one species more frequently serves as the maternal or paternal parent in initial F1 hybrid formation, are commonly observed in plants. Asymmetric introgression, the predominantly unidirectional transfer of genetic material through hybridization and backcrossing, has also been frequently documented in hybridizing plant taxa as well. This study investigates whether asymmetries in total RI measured between species can predict the direction of introgression in naturally hybridizing plant taxa. A meta-analysis was conducted on 19 plant species pairs with published data on both asymmetric total RI, and asymmetric introgression. Species pairs that met these criteria were identified through a comprehensive literature review. A two-tailed binomial test was performed to evaluate whether asymmetric RI was associated with asymmetries in introgression. No significant relationship was found between asymmetries in total RI and the direction of introgression (p = 0.3593). Asymmetric RI largely does not predict the direction of introgression. Rather, introgression patterns may be better understood by examining F1 and later-generation hybrids in natural settings, focusing on their fitness, mating behaviors, and the ecological and demographic factors that shape hybrid zones.