Real-time geographic settling of a hybrid zone between the invasive
winter moth (Operophtera brumata L.) and the native Bruce spanworm (O.
bruceata Hulst)
Abstract
Hybridization plays an important and underappreciated role in shaping
the evolutionary trajectories of species. Following the introduction of
a non-native organism to a novel habitat, hybridization with a native
congener may affect the probability of establishment of the introduced
species. In most documented cases of hybridization between a native and
a non-native species, a mosaic hybrid zone is formed, with hybridization
occurring heterogeneously across the landscape. In contrast, most
naturally occurring hybrid zones are clinal in structure. Here we report
on a long-term microsatellite dataset that monitored hybridization
between the invasive winter moth, Operophtera brumata (Lepidoptera:
Geometridae), and the native Bruce spanworm, O. bruceata, over a 12-year
period. Our results document one of the first examples of the real-time
formation and geographic settling of a clinal hybrid zone. In addition,
by comparing one transect in Massachusetts where extreme winter cold
temperatures have been hypothesized to restrict the distribution of
winter moth, and one in coastal Connecticut, where winter temperatures
are moderated by Long Island Sound, we find that the location of the
hybrid zone appears to be independent of environmental variables and
maintained under a tension model wherein the stability of the hybrid
zone is constrained by population density, reduced hybrid fitness, and
low dispersal rates. Documenting the formation of a contemporary clinal
hybrid zone may provide important insights into the factors that shaped
other well-established hybrid zones.