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Reproductive Isolation Among <Emphasis Type="Italic">Drosophila arizonae</Emphasis> from Geographically Isolated Regions of North America
Authors:Joseph A McGirr  Lena M Johnson  Whitney Kelly  Therese A Markow  Jeremy M Bono
Institution:1.Department of Biology,University of Colorado Colorado Springs,Colorado Springs,USA;2.Laboratorio Nacional de la Genomica para la Biodiversidad,CINVESTAV,Irapuato,Mexico;3.Division of Biological Sciences,University of California at San Diego,La Jolla,USA;4.Genome Sciences,University of North Carolina Chapel Hill,Chapel Hill,USA
Abstract:A long-standing goal of speciation research is to describe how reproductive isolating barriers develop, when they arise along the ‘speciation continuum’, and to measure the strength with which they restrict gene flow. Drosophila arizonae and D. mojavensis are a recently diverged sister species pair distributed from the southwestern United States through southern Mexico. While incipient speciation in D. mojavensis has been studied for decades, relatively little attention has been directed toward D. arizonae, despite the fact that previous studies have revealed evidence for significant genetic differentiation among populations separated by geographic barriers. Here, we examine the potential for both pre- and post-mating reproductive isolation in D. arizonae from geographically isolated parts of North America. We find evidence for strong premating isolation between flies from northern mainland Mexico and southern mainland Mexico, but no evidence for postmating isolation in any cross. This study highlights the utility of the D. arizonae system for further investigation into the early evolution of premating isolation, and reinforces the potential of the D. arizonae/D. mojavensis system as a whole for studying the evolution of reproductive isolation at a range of divergence times.
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