Geography is essential for reproductive isolation between florally diversified morning glory species from Amazon canga savannahs
Author
Babiychuk, ElenaTeixeira, Juliana Galaschi
Tyski, Lourival
Guimaraes, José Tasso Felix
Romeiro, Luiza Araújo
da Silva, Edilson Freitas
dos Santos, Jorge Filipe
Vasconcelos, Santelmo
da Silva, Delmo Fonseca
Castilho, Alexandre
Siqueira, José Oswaldo
Fonseca, Vera Lucia Imperatriz
Kushnir, Sergei
Date
2019-12-02
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Babiychuk, E., Teixeira, J.G., Tyski, L. et al. Geography is essential for reproductive isolation between florally diversified morning glory species from Amazon canga savannahs. Sci Rep 9, 18052 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-53853-4Abstract
The variety, relative importance and eco-evolutionary stability of reproductive barriers are critical to understanding the processes of speciation and species persistence. Here we evaluated the strength of the biotic prezygotic and postzygotic isolation barriers between closely related morning glory species from Amazon canga savannahs. The flower geometry and flower visitor assemblage analyses supported pollination by the bees in lavender-flowered Ipomoea marabaensis and recruitment of hummingbirds as pollinators in red-flowered Ipomoea cavalcantei. Nevertheless, native bee species and alien honeybees foraged on flowers of both species. Real-time interspecific hybridization underscored functionality of the overlap in flower visitor assemblages, questioning the strength of prezygotic isolation underpinned by diversification in flower colour and geometry. Interspecific hybrids were fertile and produced offspring in nature. No significant asymmetry in interspecific hybridization and hybrid incompatibilities among offspring were found, indicating weak postmating and postzygotic isolation. The results suggested that despite floral diversification, the insular-type geographic isolation remains a major barrier to gene flow. Findings set a framework for the future analysis of contemporary evolution of plant-pollinator networks at the population, community, and ecosystem levels in tropical ecosystems that are known to be distinct from the more familiar temperate climate models.Funder
CNPqGrant Number
302839/2016-0ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-53853-4
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