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Outbreeding depression in the common frog, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Rana temporaria</Emphasis>
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">J?rgen?SagvikEmail author  Tobias?Uller  Mats?Olsson
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, Göteborg University, Medicinaregatan 18, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden;(2) Department of Biological Sciences, University of Wollongong, NSW, 2522, Australia
Abstract:Theory suggests that parental relatedness is a continuous variable with a fitness optimum that we heretoforth will refer to as lsquooptimal outbreedingrsquo. In the present paper, we test this proposition from a conservation (translocation) perspective. Amphibians are facing a global decline and many amphibian populations are today small and threatened by extinction. Because genetic differentiation is often high between amphibian populations, they could be particularly sensitive to outbreeding depression, e.g. due to breakdown of locally adapted gene complexes. We tested if outbreeding would reduce fitness in common frogs, Rana temporaria, crossed from a large and an isolated, small population, separated by 130thinspkm, using artificial fertilization. For females from the large population, tadpoles were significantly smaller and more malformed in crosses with males from the small population, than with males from the large population. For the small population, however, no significant paternal genetic effects could be found. The difference in response to outbreeding between populations was accompanied with significant differences in the importance of maternal effects. We conclude that care should be taken when translocating frogs between distantly related populations to avoid outbreeding depression.
Keywords:amphibian decline  inbreeding  outbreeding  Rana temporaria
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