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Sexual signal evolution and patterns of assortative mating across an intraspecific contact zone
Authors:Florine J. M. Pascal  Andrés Vega  Maria Akopyan  Kim L. Hoke  Jeanne M. Robertson
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, California State University, Northridge, Northridge, California, USA;2. AMBICOR, Tibás, Costa Rica

Contribution: Data curation (lead), ​Investigation (equal), Writing - review & editing (equal);3. Department of Biology, California State University, Northridge, Northridge, California, USA

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, New York, New York, USA

Contribution: Data curation (supporting), ​Investigation (equal), Visualization (supporting), Writing - review & editing (equal);4. Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization (equal), Formal analysis (supporting), Funding acquisition (equal), ​Investigation (equal), Visualization (supporting), Writing - review & editing (equal);5. Department of Biology, California State University, Northridge, Northridge, California, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization (equal), Funding acquisition (equal), ​Investigation (equal), Visualization (supporting), Writing - review & editing (equal)

Abstract:Contact zones provide important insights into the evolutionary processes that underlie lineage divergence and speciation. Here, we use a contact zone to ascertain speciation potential in the red-eyed treefrog (Agalychnis callidryas), a brightly coloured and polymorphic frog that exhibits unusually high levels of intraspecific variation. Populations of A. callidryas differ in a number of traits, several of which are known sexual signals that mediate premating reproductive isolation in allopatric populations. Along the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica, a ~100 km contact zone, situated between two phenotypically and genetically divergent parent populations, contains multiple colour pattern phenotypes and late-generation hybrids. This contact zone provides the opportunity to examine processes that are important in the earliest stages of lineage divergence. We performed analyses of colour pattern variation in five contact zone sites and six parental sites and found complex, continuous colour variation along the contact zone. We found discordance between the geographic distribution of colour pattern and previously described genomic population structure. We then used a parental site and contact zone site to measure assortative mating and directional selection from naturally-occurring amplectant mating pairs. We found assortative mating in a parental population, but no assortative mating in the contact zone. Furthermore, we uncovered evidence of directional preference towards the adjacent parental phenotype in the contact zone population, but no directional preference in the parent population. Combined, these data provide insights into potential dynamics at the contact zone borders and indicate that incipient speciation between parent populations will be slowed.
Keywords:amphibians & reptiles  sexual selection & conflicts  speciation
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