Incomplete sexual isolation in sympatry between subspecies of the butterfly Danaus chrysippus (L.) and the creation of a hybrid zone
Subspecies chrysippus , dorippus and alcippus of the butterfly Danaus chrysippus differ at three biallelic colour gene loci. They have partially vicariant distributions, but their ranges overlap over a substantial part of central and East Africa, where hybridism is commonplace. We now report that th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Heredity 2003-03, Vol.90 (3), p.236-246 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Subspecies
chrysippus
,
dorippus
and
alcippus
of the butterfly
Danaus
chrysippus
differ at three biallelic colour gene loci. They have partially vicariant distributions, but their ranges overlap over a substantial part of central and East Africa, where hybridism is commonplace. We now report that the West African subspecies
alcippus
differs from other subspecies, not only in nuclear genotype but also in mitochondrial haplotype in both allopatry and sympatry. The maintenance of concordant nuclear and cytoplasmic genetic differences in sympatry, and in the face of hybridisation, is
prima facie
evidence for sexual isolation. Other evidence that suggests
alcippus
may be isolated from
chrysippus
and
dorippus
include differences in sex ratio (SR), heterozygote deficiency at one site and deduced differences in patterns of migration. We suggest that, within the hybrid zone, differential infection of subspecies by a male-killing
Spiroplasma
bacterium causes SR differences that restrict female choice, triggering rounds of heterotypic mating and consequent heterozygote excess that is largely confined to females. The absence of these phenomena from hybrid populations that test negative for
Spiroplasma
supports the hypothesis. The incomplete sexual isolation and partial vicariance of
alcippus
suggests that it is a nascent species. |
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ISSN: | 0018-067X 1365-2540 |
DOI: | 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800219 |