4.5 Article

ECOLOGICAL SEGREGATION IN A SMALL MAMMAL HYBRID ZONE: HABITAT-SPECIFIC MATING OPPORTUNITIES AND SELECTION AGAINST HYBRIDS RESTRICT GENE FLOW ON A FINE SPATIAL SCALE

期刊

EVOLUTION
卷 68, 期 3, 页码 729-742

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/evo.12299

关键词

woodrats; microsatellites; Neotoma; natural selection; Ecological divergence; hybridization

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-0608437, DEB-0644371, DEB-0952946]
  2. National Institutes of Health-Idaho INBRE program [P20RR16454]
  3. Community Foundation's (serving Riverside County) California Desert Research Fund
  4. Community Foundation's (serving San Bernardino County) California Desert Research Fund
  5. American Museum of Natural History
  6. American Society of Mammalogists
  7. Idaho State University
  8. Direct For Biological Sciences
  9. Division Of Environmental Biology [0952946] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The degree to which closely related species interbreed is determined by a complex interaction of ecological, behavioral, and genetic factors. We examine the degree of interbreeding between two woodrat species, Neotoma bryanti and N. lepida, at a sharp ecological transition. We identify the ecological association of each genotypic class, assess the opportunity for mating between these groups, and test whether they have similar patterns of year-to-year persistence on our study site. We find that 13% of individuals have a hybrid signature but that the two parental populations and backcrosses are highly segregated by habitat type and use. Also, we find that adult hybrids are comparable to parental types in terms of year-to-year persistence on our site but that, among juveniles, significantly fewer hybrids reach adulthood on site compared to their purebred counterparts. Our analyses show that this hybrid zone is maintained by occasional nonassortative mating coupled with hybrid fertility, but that these factors are balanced by lower apparent survival of juvenile hybrids and habitat-based preference or selection that limits heterospecific mating while promoting backcrossing to habitat-specific genotypes. This system presents a novel example of the role that sharp resource gradients play in reproductive isolation and the potential for genetic introgression.

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