» Articles » PMID: 18786192

Male Discrimination of Female Mucous Trails Permits Assortative Mating in a Marine Snail Species

Overview
Journal Evolution
Specialty Biology
Date 2008 Sep 13
PMID 18786192
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Recent research has shown the potential for nonallopatric speciation, but we lack an adequate understanding of the mechanisms of prezygotic barriers and how these evolve in the presence of gene flow. The marine snail Littorina saxatilis has distinct ecotypes in different shore microhabitats. Ecotypes hybridize in contact zones, but gene flow is impeded by assortative mating. Earlier studies have shown that males and females of the same ecotype copulate for longer than mates of different ecotype. Here we report a new mechanism that further contributes to reproductive isolation between ecotypes in the presence of gene flow. This mechanism is linked to the ability of males to track potential partners by following their mucous trail. We show that cliff ecotype males follow the trails of females of the same ecotype for longer than females of the alternate (boulder) ecotype. In addition, cliff males are more likely to follow the mucous trail in the correct direction if the trail is laid by a cliff-female. The capacity to discriminate the ecotype of female mucous trails combined with differential copulation times creates a strong prezygotic reproductive barrier between ecotypes of L. saxatilis that reduces gene flow from cliff to boulder ecotypes by >/=80%.

Citing Articles

Chemical communication and its role in sexual selection across Animalia.

Buchinger T, Li W Commun Biol. 2023; 6(1):1178.

PMID: 37985853 PMC: 10662023. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-023-05572-w.


Genetic variation for adaptive traits is associated with polymorphic inversions in .

Koch E, Morales H, Larsson J, Westram A, Faria R, Lemmon A Evol Lett. 2021; 5(3):196-213.

PMID: 34136269 PMC: 8190449. DOI: 10.1002/evl3.227.


The protein and volatile components of trail mucus in the Common Garden Snail, Cornu aspersum.

Ballard K, Klein A, Hayes R, Wang T, Cummins S PLoS One. 2021; 16(5):e0251565.

PMID: 34043643 PMC: 8158898. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251565.


Premating barriers in young sympatric snail species.

Maltseva A, Varfolomeeva M, Lobov A, Tikanova P, Repkin E, Babkina I Sci Rep. 2021; 11(1):5720.

PMID: 33707514 PMC: 7952697. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-84407-2.


Divergent male and female mate preferences do not explain incipient speciation between lizard lineages.

McLean C, Bartle R, Dong C, Rankin K, Stuart-Fox D Curr Zool. 2020; 66(5):485-492.

PMID: 33293929 PMC: 7705505. DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoaa010.