2017
DOI: 10.1007/s00338-017-1563-z
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Hybridization between damselfishes Dascyllus aruanus and D. reticulatus on the Great Barrier Reef

Abstract: Hybridization between damselfishes Dascyllus aruanus and D. reticulatus on the Great Barrier Reef Hybridization among closely related species is relatively common in marine fishes that spawn mid-water. Although at least 81 species of tropical coral-reef fish have been reported to hybridize in nature (primarily Chaetodontidae, Pomacanthidae and Labridae), hybridization is thought to be exceedingly rare among benthic-nesting species that engage in pair spawning, such as the Pomacentridae (Montanari et al. 2016).… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Hybridization was once considered rare in the marine environment (Arnold, 1997); however, a surge of recent studies has challenged these traditional perceptions of hybrid scarcity (Gardner, 1997; Harrison et al., 2017; He, Johansen, Hoey, Pappas, & Berumen, 2019; Johansen et al., 2017; Montanari, Hobbs, Pratchett, Bay, & van Herwerden, 2017; Montanari, Hobbs, Pratchett, & van Herwerden, 2016; Pazmiño et al., 2019; Willis, van Oppen, Miller, Vollmer, & Ayre, 2006). Hybridization is particularly common in coral reef fishes, where largely allopatric sister species hybridize at their biogeographic borders.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hybridization was once considered rare in the marine environment (Arnold, 1997); however, a surge of recent studies has challenged these traditional perceptions of hybrid scarcity (Gardner, 1997; Harrison et al., 2017; He, Johansen, Hoey, Pappas, & Berumen, 2019; Johansen et al., 2017; Montanari, Hobbs, Pratchett, Bay, & van Herwerden, 2017; Montanari, Hobbs, Pratchett, & van Herwerden, 2016; Pazmiño et al., 2019; Willis, van Oppen, Miller, Vollmer, & Ayre, 2006). Hybridization is particularly common in coral reef fishes, where largely allopatric sister species hybridize at their biogeographic borders.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%