Abstract

Rare hybridisations between deeply divergent animal species have been reported for decades in a wide range of taxa, but have often remained unexplained, mainly considered chance events and reported as anecdotal. Here, we combine field observations with long-term data concerning natural hybridisations, climate, land-use, and field-validated species distribution models for two deeply divergent and naturally sympatric toad species in Europe (Bufo bufo and Bufotes viridis species groups). We show that climate warming and seasonal extreme temperatures are conspiring to set the scene for these maladaptive hybridisations, by differentially affecting life-history traits of both species. Our results identify and provide evidence of an ultimate cause for such events, and reveal that the potential influence of climate change on interspecific hybridisations goes far beyond closely related species. Furthermore, climate projections suggest that the chances for these events will steadily increase in the near future.

Highlights

  • Hybridisation is a widespread phenomenon in nature (Mallet, 2005)

  • Pre-mating reproductive barriers could be incomplete between these species, and their genomes could still be porous to introgression, with several far reaching implications (Mallet, 2005; Arnold, 2006; Schwenk, Brede & Streit, 2008; Hewitt, 2011)

  • We examined the contribution of multiple factors, including all those commonly invoked to explain novel interspecific hybridisations among animal species in the wild

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Summary

Introduction

Hybridisation is a widespread phenomenon in nature (Mallet, 2005). its frequency, diversity of outcomes, underlying mechanisms, its role in the evolutionary process, and how to deal with it in conservation biology have been controversial topics for more than a century (Arnold, 2006; Schwenk, Brede & Streit, 2008). The diagnostic value of each allozyme locus was verified through preliminary analyses of 20 individuals per species, sampled from two sites in neighbouring areas, where no evidence of potential hybridisation had been observed (Bufo bufo: 41.1737N, 14.5834E; Bufotes balearicus: 40.8866N, 14.9318E).

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