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Linkage of butterfly mate preference and wing color preference cue at the genomic location of wingless

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TLDR
It is shown that the specific cue used by Heliconius cydno and Heliconii pachinus males to recognize conspecific females is the color of patches on the wings, indicating a genetic association between the loci responsible for preference and preference cue.
Abstract
Sexual isolation is a critical form of reproductive isolation in the early stages of animal speciation, yet little is known about the genetic basis of divergent mate preferences and preference cues in young species. Heliconius butterflies, well known for their diversity of wing color patterns, mate assortatively as a result of divergence in male preference for wing patterns. Here we show that the specific cue used by Heliconius cydno and Heliconius pachinus males to recognize conspecific females is the color of patches on the wings. In addition, male mate preference segregates with forewing color in hybrids, indicating a genetic association between the loci responsible for preference and preference cue. Quantitative trait locus mapping places a preference locus coincident with the locus that determines forewing color, which itself is perfectly linked to the wing patterning candidate gene, wingless. Furthermore, yellow-colored males of the polymorphic race H. cydno alithea prefer to court yellow females, indicating that wing color and color preference are controlled by loci that are located in an inversion or are pleiotropic effects of a single locus. Tight genetic associations between preference and preference cue, although rare, make divergence and speciation particularly likely because the effects of natural and sexual selection on one trait are transferred to the other, leading to the coordinated evolution of mate recognition. This effect of linkage on divergence is especially important in Heliconius because differentiation of wing color patterns in the genus has been driven and maintained by natural selection for Mullerian mimicry.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Divergent selection and heterogeneous genomic divergence.

TL;DR: It is concluded that divergent selection makes diverse contributions to heterogeneous genomic divergence, and the number, size, and distribution of genomic regions affected by selection varied substantially among studies, leading us to discuss the potential role of Divergent selection in the growth of regions of differentiation (i.e. genomic islands of divergence), a topic in need of future investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sympatric Speciation: Models and Empirical Evidence

TL;DR: It is now generally accepted that sympatric speciation has occurred in at least a few instances, and is theoretically plausible, and progress is being made on evaluating the empirical validity of key theoretical conditions for sympatrics speciation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetics and ecological speciation.

TL;DR: It is proposed that ecological speciation has occurred multiple times in parallel in threespine stickleback via a “transporter” process in which selection in freshwater environments repeatedly acts on standing genetic variation that is maintained in marine populations by export of freshwater-adapted alleles from elsewhere in the range.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking color polymorphism maintenance and speciation.

TL;DR: The survey reveals that several mechanisms, some operating between populations and others within them, can contribute to both color polymorphism persistence and speciation, and suggests that diverse forms of within-population sexual selection can generate negative frequency dependence and initiate reproductive isolation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magic traits in speciation: 'magic' but not rare?

TL;DR: It is illustrated that magic traits can be produced by a variety of mechanisms, including ones in which reproductive isolation arises as an automatic by-product of adaptive divergence.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping mendelian factors underlying quantitative traits using rflp linkage maps

TL;DR: In this paper, a set of analytical methods that modify and extend the classical theory for mapping such quantitative trait loci (QTLs) are described, and explicit graphs are provided that allow experimental geneticists to estimate, in any particular case, the number of progeny required to map QTLs underlying a quantitative trait.
Journal ArticleDOI

MapChart: Software for the Graphical Presentation of Linkage Maps and QTLs

TL;DR: MapChart is a software package that takes as input the linkage and QTL data and generates charts of linkage maps andQTLs and is exported as vector graphics rather than bitmaps, which makes them easy to rescale and to edit further if desired.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a taxonomy of diverse and diverse populations in the United States, including the following: 1.ORGANIC DIVERSITY 3 GENE MUTATION 15 MUTation as a basis for RACIAL and SPECIFIC DIFFERENCES 39 CHROMOSOMAL CHANGES 73 VARIATION in NATURAL POPULATION 118 SELECTION 149 POLYPLOIDY 192 ISOLATING MECHANISMS 228 HYBRID STERILITY 259 SPECIES AS NATUREAL UNITS 303 L

Software for the calculation of genetic linkage maps in experimental populations

TL;DR: JoinMap is developed by Kyazma B.V. in collaboration with statistical geneticists of Biometris of Wageningen UR (www.biometris.wur.nl) and aims to provide real-time information about gene expression in the population to facilitate informed decision-making.
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