Scientists find tropical butterflies that may soon split into two species
November 6th, 2009 - 3:42 pm ICT by ANIWashington, November 6 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found a population of tropical butterflies that may be on its way to a split into two distinct species.
The researchers describe the relationship between diverging color patterns in Heliconius butterflies and the long-term divergence of populations into new and distinct species.
“Our paper provides a unique glimpse into the earliest stage of ecological speciation, where natural selection to fit the environment causes the same trait in the same population to be pushed in two different directions,” said Marcus Kronforst, a Bauer Fellow in the Center for Systems Biology at Harvard University.
“If this trait is also involved in reproduction, this process can have a side effect of causing the divergent subpopulations to no longer interbreed. This appears to be the process that is just beginning among Heliconius butterflies in Ecuador,” he added.
Heliconius butterflies display incredible color pattern variation across Central and South America, with closely related species usually sporting different colors.
In Costa Rica, for example, the two most closely related species differ in color: One species is white and the other is yellow.
In addition, both species display a marked preference to mate with butter-flies of the same color.
The Ecuadorian population examined by Kronforst and his colleagues shows the same white and yellow variation found in Costa Rica but has not yet reached a level of strong reproductive isolation.
The entire population lives in close proximity and individuals of both colors come in contact with - and mate with - each other.
But, by studying the Ecuadorian population in captivity, the scientists found the two colors do not mate randomly.
Despite the genetic similarity between the groups - white and yellow varieties differ only at the color-determining gene - yellow Ecuadorian individuals show a preference for those of the same color.
White male butterflies, most of which are heterozygous at the gene that controls color, show no color preference.
“This subtle difference in mate preference between the color forms in Ecuador may be the first step in a process that could eventually result in two species, as we see in Costa Rica,” said Kronforst.
The next step for the researchers is to identify the gene (or genes) responsible for the differences in color and mate preference.
“If we can identify this gene or genes, we can say conclusively how they influence both color and mate choice,” said Kronforst.
“Subsequent work could elucidate exactly how changes in individual genes can, over long periods of time, lead to novel species,” he added. (ANI)
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Tags: butter flies, captivity, close proximity, color pattern variation, color patterns, different colors, distinct species, divergence, genetic similarity, harvard university, heliconius butterflies, natural selection, population lives, reproductive isolation, research scientists, speciation, systems biology, tropical butterflies, two colors, two different directions