Although the unique features of asexual reproduction and hybridization among European spined loaches (genus Cobitis) have recently attracted the attention of conservation biologists, faunists and evolutionary biologists, the research has suffered from uncertain identification of specimens and their genomes because of the extreme morphological similarity of all the species within the hybrid complex. In this article, a Europe-wide study is reported, which was performed on samples collected by several research teams. Several complementary methodologies, such as allozyme analysis, karyotyping, flow cytometry and DNA sequencing allowed us to confirm or reject the existence of all previously reported species and their hybrids as well as to uncover several new hybrid biotypes. The biogeography of all the known biotypes, that is, parental species and hybrid biotypes, has been summarized here and the taxonomic position of two undescribed putative species mentioned in previous publications has been established. New polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment length polymorphism markers for species determination have further been developed and applied, which would allow the unambiguous identification of parental species and their genomes in the known hybrid biotypes within the complex.
Recent advances in population history reconstruction offered a powerful tool for comparisons of the abilities of sexual and clonal forms to respond to Quaternary climatic oscillations, ultimately leading to inferences about the advantages and disadvantages of a given mode of reproduction. We reconstructed the Quaternary historical biogeography of the sexual parental species and clonal hybrid lineages within the Europe-wide hybrid complex of Cobitis spiny loaches. Cobitis elongatoides and Cobitis taenia recolonizing Europe from separated refuges met in central Europe and the Pontic region giving rise to hybrid lineages during the Holocene. Cobitis elongatoides due to its long-term reproductive contact with the remaining parental species of the complex--C. tanaitica and C. spec.--gave rise to two clonal hybrid lineages probably during the last interglacial or even earlier, which survived the Würmian glaciation with C. elongatoides. These lineages followed C. elongatoides postglacial expansion and probably decreased its dispersal rate. Our data indicate the frequent origins of asexuality irrespective of the parental populations involved and the comparable dispersal potential of diploid and triploid lineages.
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