David Bierbach, Marina Penshorn, Sybille Hamfler, Denise B. Herbert, Jessica Appel, Philipp Meyer, Patrick Slattery, Sarah Charaf, Raoul Wolf, Johannes Völker, Elisabeth Berger, Janis Dröge, Konstantin Wolf, Rüdiger Riesch, Lenin Arias-Rodriguez, Jeanne R. Indy, Martin Plath
- Ecological speciation assumes reproductive isolation to be the product of ecologically based divergent selection. Beside natural selection, sexual selection via phenotype-assortative mating is thought to promote reproductive isolation. Using the neotropical fish Poecilia mexicana from a system that has been described to undergo incipient ecological speciation in adjacent, but ecologically divergent habitats characterized by the presence or absence of toxic H2S and darkness in cave habitats, we demonstrate a gradual change in male body colouration along the gradient of light/darkness, including a reduction of ornaments that are under both inter- and intrasexual selection in surface populations. In dichotomous choice tests using video-animated stimuli, we found surface females to prefer males from their own population over the cave phenotype. However, female cave fish, observed on site via infrared techniques, preferred to associate with surface males rather than size-matched cave males, likely reflecting the female preference for better-nourished (in this case: surface) males. Hence, divergent selection on body colouration indeed translates into phenotype-assortative mating in the surface ecotype, by selecting against potential migrant males. Female cave fish, by contrast, do not have a preference for the resident male phenotype, identifying natural selection against migrants imposed by the cave environment as the major driver of the observed reproductive isolation.
MetadatenAuthor: | David Bierbach, Marina Penshorn, Sybille Hamfler, Denise B. Herbert, Jessica Appel, Philipp Meyer, Patrick Slattery, Sarah Charaf, Raoul Wolf, Johannes VölkerORCiDGND, Elisabeth Berger, Janis DrögeORCiDGND, Konstantin Wolf, Rüdiger RieschORCiD, Lenin Arias-Rodriguez, Jeanne R. Indy, Martin PlathORCiDGND |
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URN: | urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-334644 |
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DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/148348 |
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ISSN: | 2314-6141 |
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Pubmed Id: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24175282 |
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Parent Title (English): | BioMed research international |
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Publisher: | Hindawi |
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Place of publication: | New York [u.a.] |
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Document Type: | Article |
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Language: | English |
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Date of Publication (online): | 2013/08/16 |
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Date of first Publication: | 2013/08/16 |
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Publishing Institution: | Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg |
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Release Date: | 2014/05/07 |
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Volume: | 2013 |
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Issue: | Article ID 148348 |
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Page Number: | 16 |
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Note: | Copyright © 2013 David Bierbach et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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HeBIS-PPN: | 364484012 |
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Institutes: | Biowissenschaften / Biowissenschaften |
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Dewey Decimal Classification: | 5 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik / 59 Tiere (Zoologie) / 590 Tiere (Zoologie) |
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Sammlungen: | Universitätspublikationen |
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| Sammlung Biologie / Sondersammelgebiets-Volltexte |
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Licence (German): | Creative Commons - Namensnennung 3.0 |
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