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Dryad

Data from: Divergence in coloration and the evolution of reproductive isolation in the Anolis marmoratus species complex

Cite this dataset

Muñoz, Martha M. et al. (2013). Data from: Divergence in coloration and the evolution of reproductive isolation in the Anolis marmoratus species complex [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.15570

Abstract

Adaptive divergence in coloration is expected to produce reproductive isolation in species that use colorful signals in mate choice and species recognition. Indeed, many adaptive radiations are characterized by differentiation in colorful signals, suggesting that divergent selection acting on coloration may be an important component of speciation. Populations in the Anolis marmoratus species complex from the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe display striking divergence in adult male color and pattern that occurs over small geographic distances, suggesting strong divergent selection. Here we test the hypothesis that coloration is locally adaptive and is linked to reduced gene flow among populations. We quantify variation in adult male coloration across a habitat gradient between mesic and xeric habitats, use a multilocus coalescent approach to infer historical demographic parameters of divergence, and examine gene flow and population structure using microsatellite variation. We find that color variation evolved without geographic isolation and in the face of rampant gene flow, consistent with strong divergent selection, and that both ecological and sexual selection are implicated. However, we find no significant differentiation at microsatellite loci across populations, suggesting little reproductive isolation and high levels of contemporary gene exchange. Strong divergent selection on loci affecting coloration likely maintains clinal phenotypic variation despite high gene flow at neutral loci, supporting the notion of a porous genome in which adaptive portions of the genome remain fixed while neutral portions are homogenized by gene flow and recombination. We discuss the impact of these findings for studies of color evolution and ecological speciation.

Usage notes

Location

Grande Terre
Guadeloupe
Lesser Antilles
Caribbean