Multiple differences in calling songs and other traits between solitary and gregarious Mormon crickets from allopatric mtDNA clades |
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Authors: | Nathan W Bailey Darryl T Gwynne William V Bailey Michael G Ritchie |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, Spieth Hall, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA;(2) Biology Department, University of Toronto at Missisauga, Missisauga, Ontario, L5L 1C6, Canada;(3) School of Biology, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, KY16 9TH, UK |
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Abstract: | Background In acoustic species, traits such as male calling song are likely to diverge quickly between allopatric populations due to sexual selection, and divergence in parameters such as carrier frequency, chirp structure, and other important song characters can influence sexual isolation. Here we make use of two forms of Mormon crickets to examine differences in a broad suite of traits that have the potential to influence speciation via sexual isolation. Mormon crickets in "gregarious" populations aggregate into dense migratory bands, and females are the sexually competitive sex (sex-role reversal). There is also a non-outbreak "solitary" form. These two forms are largely but not perfectly correlated with a significant mtDNA subdivision within the species that is thought to have arisen in allopatry. Combined information about multiple, independently evolving traits, such as morphology and structural and behavioural differences in calling song, provides greater resolution of the overall differences between these allopatric populations, and allows us to assess their stage of divergence. We test two predictions, first that the forms differ in song and second that gregarious males are more reluctant to sing than solitary males due to sex role reversal. We also tested for a difference in the relationship between the size of the forewing resonator, the mirror, and carrier frequency, as most models of sound production in crickets indicate that mirror size should predict carrier frequency. |
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