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ECOLOGICAL DIVERGENCE ASSOCIATED WITH MATING SYSTEM CAUSES NEARLY COMPLETE REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION BETWEEN SYMPATRIC MIMULUS SPECIES
Author(s) -
Martin Noland H.,
Willis John H.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00006.x
Subject(s) - biology , reproductive isolation , sympatric speciation , introgression , hybrid , incipient speciation , pollen , sympatry , evolutionary biology , ecological speciation , mating , hybrid zone , ecology , zoology , botany , genetic variation , gene flow , genetics , population , gene , demography , sociology
Speciation often involves the evolution of numerous prezygotic and postzygotic isolating barriers between divergent populations. Detailed knowledge of the strength and nature of those barriers provides insight into ecological and genetic factors that directly or indirectly influenced their origin, and may help predict whether they will be maintained in the face of sympatric hybridization and introgression. We estimated the magnitude of pre‐ and postzygotic barriers between naturally occurring sympatric populations of Mimulus guttatus and M. nasutus . Prezygotic barriers, including divergent flowering phenologies, differential pollen production, mating system isolation, and conspecific pollen precedence, act asymmetrically to completely prevent the formation of F 1 hybrids among seeds produced by M. guttatus (F 1 g), and reduce F 1 hybrid production among seeds produced by M. nasutus (F 1 n) to only about 1%. Postzygotic isolation is also asymmetric: in field experiments, F 1 g but not F 1 n hybrids had significantly reduced germination rates and survivorship compared to parental species. Both hybrid classes had flower, pollen, and seed production values within the range of parental values. Despite the moderate degree of F 1 g hybrid inviability, postzygotic isolation contributes very little to the total isolation between these species in the wild. We also found that F 1 hybrid flowering phenology overlapped more with M. guttatus than M. nasutus . These results, taken together, suggest greater potential for introgression from M. nasutus to M. guttatus than for the reverse direction. We also address problems with commonly used indices of isolation, discuss difficulties in calculating meaningful measures of reproductive isolation when barriers are asymmetric, and propose novel measures of prezygotic isolation that are consistent with postzygotic measures.

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