(A) Visual representation of how our crosses were conducted. Haploid yeast from two genetically distinct parental strains are mated to produce a heterozygous diploid. Meiosis is induced and the resulting meiotic products (tetrads) are manually dissected, and each haploid meiotic product is grown mitotically to obtain enough material for DNA extraction and whole genome sequencing. We then call SNPs on the resulting sequences and retain loci with fixed differences between parents. These loci are then coded as 1 or 0 depending on the parent of origin and the CrossOver software detects COs and NCOs. (B) A schematic of how introgression likely arose in the strains sampled from fermentation environments. These introgressions are likely due to S. eubayanus hybridizing with S. uvarum at some point in the past, resulting in F1 hybrids that then potentially crossed with other S. uvarum individuals for some number of generations. Eventually, the S. eubayanus ancestry was degraded in the population of S. uvarum until the introgressions we observe today remained, potentially segregating in the population. A similar process likely happened in each of the parental strains we utilized, but with different introgressions remaining in each strain. We crossed haploid individuals from two parental strains, resulting in a diploid that is heterozygous for each introgression.