Absence of female preference and the origin of a unisexual species, the Amazon molly (Poecilia formosa)

Author:

Smith Caden1ORCID,Berbel‐Filho Waldir Miron12ORCID,Spikes Montrai1ORCID,Fyon Frederic3ORCID,Úbeda Francisco3ORCID,Schlupp Ingo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences University of Oklahoma Norman Oklahoma USA

2. International Stock Center for Livebearing Fishes University of Oklahoma Norman Oklahoma USA

3. Department of Biology Royal Holloway University of London Egham UK

Abstract

AbstractThe role of hybridization as a formative process in evolution has received much attention in the past few decades. A particularly fascinating outcome of hybrid speciation is the formation of asexual hybrid species. The Amazon molly (Poecilia formosa) is such a hybrid and originated from a P. mexicana mother and a P. latipinna father. Consequently, a heterospecific mating must have occurred leading to the Amazon molly, indicating a breakdown of any potential prezygotic isolation between parental species. Here we studied the female mate preferences of extant P. mexicana and P. latipinna from several populations using standard binary choice tests with males of both sexual species that were matched for size. Poecilia mexicana and P. latipinna can be crossed in the lab, however, the offspring are not asexual, but sexual F1s. In our study, we generated F1s and tested their mating preferences with sexual males of both P. mexicana and P. latipinna against F1 males. Overall, our results show that in extant P. mexicana and P. latipinna no female preference for conspecific males was detectable. Consequently, heterospecific matings are possible and not hindered by any apparent behavioral prezygotic isolation. If female preferences in these species were comparable around the time the Amazon molly originated as a hybrid species ca. 100,000 years ago, matings leading to hybrids would be very likely. F1 females also have no discernable mating preferences for either sexual males or F1 males. Such lack of prezygotic behavioral isolation could potentially lead to F2 individuals, backcrosses, and introgression.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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