A captive breeding experiment reveals no evidence of reproductive isolation among lineages of a polytypic poison frog |
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Authors: | Matthew B. Dugas Corinne L. Richards‐Zawacki |
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Affiliation: | Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA |
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Abstract: | Reproductive isolation is central to the generation of biodiversity, yet a clear understanding of the contributions of alternative reproductive barriers to this process remains elusive. Studies of young lineages that have diverged in ecologically important traits can offer insights into the chronology and relative importance of various isolating mechanisms during speciation. In poison frogs (Dendrobatidae), within‐species lineages often differ dramatically in coloration, a trait subject to natural and sexual selection. Coloration in the strawberry poison frog (Oophaga pumilio) is particularly diverse and previous work suggests the potential for reproductive isolation. We used a captive breeding experiment to assess the extent of reproductive isolation among three allopatric, genetically distinct O. pumilio lineages that differ in coloration. We compared reproduction of within‐ and between‐lineage pairs, predicting that if lineages are isolated, within‐lineage pairs would be most successful. We also examined the fertility and productivity of F1 backcrosses of admixed offspring. We found no evidence suggesting behavioural pre‐zygotic or post‐zygotic reproductive isolation, indicating that isolation would not be maintained by intrinsic mechanisms in the event of secondary contact. Future work should address costs of between‐lineage matings exerted by extrinsic natural and/or sexual selection against admixed offspring. |
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Keywords: | cross‐breeding colour polytypism Dendrobatidae speciation |
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