2009
DOI: 10.1126/science.1179141
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Polymorphic Butterfly Reveals the Missing Link in Ecological Speciation

Abstract: Ecological speciation occurs when ecologically-based divergent selection causes the evolution of reproductive isolation. While there are many empirical examples of this process, there exists a poorly characterized stage during which the traits that distinguish species ecologically and reproductively segregate in a single population. Using a combination of genetic mapping, mate choice experiments, field observations, and population genetics, we studied a butterfly population with a mimetic wing color polymorphi… Show more

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Cited by 133 publications
(170 citation statements)
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“…Overall, 88% of females reject their own morph more often than dissimilar ones. The genetics of mate preference are unknown in this species, but male preference loci causing assortative mating have been mapped in other Heliconius species and shown to be linked to color patterning loci, such as K and optix (10,31,32). Moreover, in the Heliconius cydno-melpomene clade, the Yb color locus, a homolog to the wing-patterning supergene of H. numata, was associated with female mate preference (33).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Overall, 88% of females reject their own morph more often than dissimilar ones. The genetics of mate preference are unknown in this species, but male preference loci causing assortative mating have been mapped in other Heliconius species and shown to be linked to color patterning loci, such as K and optix (10,31,32). Moreover, in the Heliconius cydno-melpomene clade, the Yb color locus, a homolog to the wing-patterning supergene of H. numata, was associated with female mate preference (33).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, polymorphism is sometimes found within populations of warningly colored species (10)(11)(12)(13). One spectacular example is the mimetic polymorphism found in the Amazonian butterfly Heliconius numata.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A clade is rarely the pure product of allopatry (Muller and Beharegaray, 2010;Imada et al, 2011). Geographical speciation can be coupled with ecological speciation (Hall, 2005;Willmott et al, 2001;Matos-Maravi et al, 2013) involving the differentiation of species lineages by changes in habitat use or behaviour (Jiggins, 2008;Chamberlain et al, 2009). Diversification along climatic gradients, such as moisture (Rieseberg et al, 1999;Gee, 2004) or temperature (Keller and Seehausen, 2012) has been documented in several clades.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A principal cost of assortative mating results from the reduced number of mating encounters experienced by rare morphs, thus constraining the evolution of assortative mating in models of speciation with gene flow [2,5,7,8,11 -16]. Yet, assortative mating at the species level is so strong and ubiquitous in nature that our ignorance of its place during the evolutionary sequence between interbreeding populations and reproductively isolated species has been referred to as the 'missing link' in evolution [17].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%