What makes a new species? A difficult question, especially given the nature of the speciation continuum. Loren Rieseberg and colleagues used a hybrid species complex, Helianthus annuus and H. petiolaris and their hybrid species, H. anomalus, to study the genetic architecture of hybrid species formation. They experimentally generated hybrids of H. annuus and H. petiolaris and compared the genomes of those experimental hybrids to the ancient hybrid species, H. anomalus. They found that the genome of the hybrid species is not a random mash-up of the parental genomes but instead is constrained by the interactions between the parental genes. The hybridization event itself may have been a random occurrence, but the genetic composition of the resulting species was anything but random.
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