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Consequences of hybridization between Ohomopterus insulicola and O. arrowianus (Coleoptera, Carabidae) in a segmented river basin: parallel formation of hybrid swarms
Authors:TEIJI SOTA  FUMIO KUSUMOTO  KOHEI KUBOTA
Institution:Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Sakyo, Kyoto 606 8502, Japan;Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Shinshu University, Matsumoto 390–8521, Japan;Laboratory of Forest Zoology, Division of Agriculture and Agricultural Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113–8657, Japan
Abstract:A putative hybrid zone between flightless earabid beetles, (iambus (Ohomopterus) insulicola and C. (0.) arrowianus nakamurai in the Ina Valley, central Honshu. Japan, was studied using experimental hybridization and morphological analysis. The principal morphological character analysed was a functional part of the male genitalia (the eopulatory piece), which is also the key diagnostic character in taxonomy. The habitat of the earabid beetles is fragmented by the Tenryu River, which runs through the Ina Valley, and its tributaries. Ohomopterus insulicola and 0. a. nakamurai occur in the upstream and downstream areas of the river basin, respectively, and a putative hybrid swarm (0. insulicola ssp. pseiidinsulkola) is found in the boundary area on the cast side of the Tenryu River. Experimental hybridization between 0. insulicola and 0. a. nakamurai resulted in F1 offspring that were morphologically similar to 0. i. pseudinsulicola. Pre‐zygotic reproductive isolation was incomplete, although the F1 males had a dysfunction in sperm production and were almost sterile. Only a single F1 pair produced F2, Backcrosses of F1 females of males of the parental species resulted in offspring that were similar to the parental species in genital morphology. Based on the discriminant function for the shape of the eopulatory piece resulting from the experimental hybridization, we demonstrate that similar hybrid swarms exist on both sides of the Tenryu River, but in locations 25 km apart. This demonstrates parallelism in hybridization events with similar consequences. The hybrid swarms consisted of beetles with intermediate morphological characters and did not contain obvious parental forms. The establishment of such intermediate populations may have been facilitated by selection for fertile hybrids in segregated local sites in the absence of frequent immigration of parental species. This study suggests that a segmented river basin provides an opportunity for establishing novel evolutionary lineages resulting from hybridization.
Keywords:earabid beetles eline hybridization  hybrid zone  hybrid swarm  genitalia  geographic variation Ohomopterus  
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