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Wiley InterScience

Evolution

Evolution

Volume 61 Issue 5, Pages 1106 - 1119

Published Online: 24 Apr 2007

© 2010, Society for the Study of Evolution



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GENETICS OF INCIPIENT SPECIATION IN DROSOPHILA MOJAVENSIS. I. MALE COURTSHIP SONG, MATING SUCCESS, AND GENOTYPE X ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS
William J. Etges 1,2 , Cássia Cardoso de Oliveira 1 , Erin Gragg 3 , Daniel Ortíz-Barrientos 4 , Mohamed A. F. Noor 3 , and Michael G. Ritchie 5
  1 Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701   2 E-mail: wetges@uark.edu   3 Biology Department, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708   4 Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Canada   5 School of Biology, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, KY16 9TS, United Kingdom
Associate Editor: D. Pfennig
Copyright 2007 The Author(s). Journal compilation © 2007 The Society for the Study of Evolution
KEYWORDS
Cactus • courtship song • desert • Drosophila mojavensis • GxE interaction • QTL • sexual isolation • speciation

ABSTRACT

Few studies have examined genotype by environment (GxE) effects on premating reproductive isolation and associated behaviors, even though such effects may be common when speciation is driven by adaptation to different environments. In this study, mating success and courtship song differences among diverging populations of Drosophila mojavensis were investigated in a two-environment quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis. Baja California and mainland Mexico populations of D. mojavensis feed and breed on different host cacti, so these host plants were used to culture F2 males to examine host-specific QTL effects and GxE interactions influencing mating success and courtship songs. Linear selection gradient analysis showed that mainland females mated with males that produced songs with significantly shorter L(long)-IPIs, burst durations, and interburst intervals. Twenty-one microsatellite loci distributed across all five major chromosomes were used to localize effects of mating success, time to copulation, and courtship song components. Male courtship success was influenced by a single detected QTL, the main effect of cactus, and four GxE interactions, whereas time to copulation was influenced by three different QTLs on the fourth chromosome. Multiple-locus restricted maximum likelihood (REML) analysis of courtship song revealed consistent effects linked with the same fourth chromosome markers that influenced time to copulation, a number of GxE interactions, and few possible cases of epistasis. GxE interactions for mate choice and song can maintain genetic variation in populations, but alter outcomes of sexual selection and isolation, so signal evolution and reproductive isolation may be slowed in diverging populations. Understanding the genetics of incipient speciation in D. mojavensis clearly depends on cactus-specific expression of traits associated with courtship behavior and sexual isolation.


Received November 9, 2006
Accepted January 17, 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00104.x About DOI

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