Segregation of Species-Specific Male Attractiveness inF 2 Hybrid Lake Malawi Cichlid Fish
Author(s) -
Ola Svensson,
Bernd Egger,
Boye L. A. Gricar,
Katie Woodhouse,
Cock van Oosterhout,
Walter Salzburger,
Ole Seehausen,
George F. Turner
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of evolutionary biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-8032
pISSN - 2090-052X
DOI - 10.4061/2011/426179
Subject(s) - reproductive isolation , biology , cichlid , sympatric speciation , zoology , mate choice , attractiveness , mating , reproductive biology , evolutionary biology , ecology , fish <actinopterygii> , genetics , demography , gene , fishery , population , psychology , sociology , psychoanalysis , embryogenesis
Among the huge radiations of haplochromine cichlid fish in Lakes Malawi and Victoria, closely related species are often reproductively isolated via female mate choice although viable fertile hybrids can be produced when females are confined only with heterospecific males. We generated F2 hybrid males from a cross between a pair of closely related sympatric cichlid fish from Lake Malawi. Laboratory mate choice experiments using microsatellite paternity analysis demonstrated that F2 hybrid males differed significantly in their attractiveness to females of the two parental species, indicating heritable variation in traits involved in mate choice that may contribute to reproductive isolation between these species. We found no significant correlation between male mating success and any measurement of male colour pattern. A simple quantitative genetic model of reproductive isolation suggests that there may be as few as two chromosomal regions controlling species-specific attractiveness. We propose that adaptive radiation of Lake Malawi cichlids could be facilitated by the presence of genes with major effects on mate choice and reproductive isolation
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