Journal
BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 132, Issue 1, Pages 32-43Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Keywords
cricket; ecological divergence; mating signals; reproductive character displacement; reproductive isolation
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Funding
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [TL4GM118977]
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Divergence in mating signals often coincides with speciation. This study on two species of crickets reveals genetic divergence among populations, with prezygotic isolation potentially mediated by female behavior in mixed populations. Male mating songs were distinguishable but with small differences, and females from intermediate populations showed preference for certain songs, suggesting minimal prezygotic isolation in these species.
Divergence in mating signals typically accompanies speciation. We examine two ecologically divergent sibling species of crickets to assess the degree and timing of the evolution of prezygotic reproductive isolation. Gryllus saxatilis occurs in rocky habitats throughout western North America with long-winged individuals capable of long-distance dispersal; Gryllus navajo is endemic to red-rock sandstone areas of south-eastern Utah and north-eastern Arizona and has short-winged individuals only capable of limited dispersal. Previous genetic work suggested some degree of introgression and/or incomplete lineage sorting is likely. Here we: (1) use restriction site associated DNA sequencing (RAD-seq) genetic data to describe the degree of genetic divergence among species and populations; (2) examine the strength of prezygotic isolation by (i) quantifying differences among male mating songs, and (ii) testing whether females prefer G. saxatilis or G. navajo calling songs. Our results show that genetically distinct pure species populations and genetically intermediate populations exist. Male mating songs are statistically distinguishable, but the absolute differences are small. In playback experiments, females from pure populations had no preference based on song; however, females from a genetically intermediate population preferred G. navajo song. Together these results suggest that prezygotic isolation is minimal, and mediated by female behaviour in admixed populations.
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