Speciation and evolutionary dynamics of asymmetric mating preference |
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Authors: | Jin Yoshimura William T. Starmer |
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Affiliation: | (1) NERC Centre for Population Biology, Imperial College at Silwood Park, SL5 7PY Ascot, Berkshire, UK;(2) Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, 13210 Syracuse, NY, USA;(3) Department of Biology, Syracuse University, 13244 Syracuse, NY, USA;(4) Present address: Department of Systems Engineering, Shizuoka University, 3-5-1 Johoku, 432-8011 Hamamatsu, Japan |
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Abstract: | Asymmetric mating preferences occur in two closely related species, if females of one species are highly selective against males of the second, while females of the second show less selection against males of the first species. It has been suggested that such asymmetry is an indicator of common ancestry between the two species, but actual observations are contradictory and inconclusive. We developed a scenario of speciation history and asymmetric mating preference, incorporating invasion dynamicsvia frequency-dependent interspecific sexual competition. A newly isolated (derived) species may form at the periphery of the ancestral species’ distribution by invading a new range. Only a few closely related species would be expected in the new area, while many related species are expected to coexist with the ancestral species. In a peripherally derived species, female mating preferences should be relaxed through sexual character release, owing to a lack of sympatric species and a scarcity of intraspecific mating opportunities. Secondary contacts may then happen as: 1. repeated invasions, i.e. subsequent invasion by the ancestral species into the new range or, 2. backward invasions, i.e. derived species incursions into the ancestral range. Repeated invasions could lead to the coexistence of both the derived species and the newly invading ancestor. Backward invasions by the derived species can succeed only when the derived females develop a strict mating discrimination against the ancestral males. We then expect strong character displacement in the derived species. Thus, peripheral isolation and repeated invasions lead to the relaxed female mating preferences in the derived species and backward invasions lead to stronger female mating preferences in the derived species. This agrees withDrosophila data from Hawaii and the continents. Experimental data of theDrosophila arizonaemojavensis species cluster also support the hypothesis. |
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Keywords: | Drosophila arizonae (arizonensis) Drosophila mojavensis interspecific sexual selection sexual competition sexual character displacement sexual character release |
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