Abstract

Abstract The evolution of sexual signaling systems is influenced by natural and sexual selection acting on complex interactions among traits. Natural hybrid zones are excellent systems for assessing fitness effects on sexual phenotypes. Most documented hybrid zones, however, show little variation in sexual signals. A hybrid zone between the swordtails Xiphophorus birchmanni and Xiphophorus malinche is characterized by numerous recombinants for male sexual traits. Analyses of geographic variation in morphological and isozyme traits in the Rio Calnali, Hidalgo, Mexico, reveal an upstream-to-downstream gradient from X. malinche- to X. birchmanni-type traits. A second hybrid zone, likely isolated from the R. Calnali, occurs in the nearby Arroyo Pochutla. Although the presumed female preference for swords predicts the introgression of swords from X. malinche-like populations into hybrid populations, the opposite pattern was observed. Swords are reduced in populations otherwise characterized by X. malinche trai...

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