Lack of assortative mating might explain reduced phenotypic differentiation where two grasshopper species meet

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-04-12

DOI

Open Access Location

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society for Evolutionary Biology

Rights

(c) 2021 The Author/s
CC BY-NC 4.0

Abstract

Hybridization is an evolutionary process with wide-ranging potential outcomes, from providing populations with important genetic variation for adaptation to being a substantial fitness cost leading to extinction. Here, we focussed on putative hybridization between two morphologically distinct species of New Zealand grasshopper. We collected Phaulacridium marginale and Phaulacridium otagoense specimens from a region where mitochondrial introgression had been detected and where their habitat has been modified by introduced mammals eating the natural vegetation and by the colonization of many non-native plant species. In contrast to observations in the 1970s, our sampling of wild pairs of grasshoppers in copula provided no evidence of assortative mating with respect to species. Geometric morphometrics on pronotum shape of individuals from areas of sympatry detected phenotypically intermediate specimens (putative hybrids), and the distribution of phenotypes in most areas of sympatry was found to be unimodal. These results suggest that hybridization associated with anthropogenic habitat changes has led to these closely related species forming a hybrid swarm, with random mating. Without evidence of hybrid disadvantage, we suggest a novel hybrid lineage might eventually result from the merging of these two species.

Description

Keywords

anthropocene, assortative mating, gene flow, geometric morphometrics, hybrid swarm, hybrid zone, intermediate phenotype, Animals, Grasshoppers, Hybridization, Genetic, Mammals, Phenotype, Reproduction, Sympatry

Citation

Morgan-Richards M, Vilcot M, Trewick SA. (2022). Lack of assortative mating might explain reduced phenotypic differentiation where two grasshopper species meet.. J Evol Biol. 35. 4. (pp. 509-519).

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) 2021 The Author/s