Abstract

Hybridization can create the selective force that promotes assortative mating but hybridization can also select for increased hybrid fitness. Gene flow resulting from hybridization can increase genetic diversity but also reduce distinctiveness. Thus the formation of hybrids has important implications for long‐term species coexistence. This study compares the interaction between the tree wētā Hemideina thoracica and its two neighboring species; H. crassidens and H. trewicki. We examined the ratio of parent and hybrid forms in natural areas of sympatry. Individuals with intermediate phenotype were confirmed as first generation hybrids using nine independent genetic markers. Evidence of gene flow from successful hybridization was sought from the distribution of morphological and genetic characters. Both species pairs appear to be largely retaining their own identity where they live in sympatry, each with a distinct karyotype. Hemideina thoracica and H. trewicki are probably reproductively isolated, with sterile F1 hybrids. This species pair shows evidence of niche differences with adult size and timing of maturity differing where Hemideina thoracica is sympatric with H. trewicki. In contrast, evidence of a low level of introgression was detected in phenotypes and genotypes where H. thoracica and H. crassidens are sympatric. We found no evidence of size divergence although color traits in combination with hind tibia spines reliably distinguish the two species. This species pair show a bimodal hybrid zone in the absence of assortative mating and possible sexual exclusion by H. thoracica males in the formation of F1 hybrids.

Highlights

  • Hybridization is the production of offspring between genetically distinct individuals (Harrison 1993), and the fitness of hybrids has fundamental implications for the populations involved

  • Similar numbers of each parent species were observed at Kahuterawa (45% H. thoracica and 52% H. crassidens plus three putative morphological hybrids), and at Mohi (45% H. thoracica, 54% H. trewicki, and one putative hybrid)

  • The tree weta Hemideina thoracica meets and mates with two different related species and the long-term outcome of these two zones of interspecific hybridization will be influenced by the rate of gene flow

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Summary

Introduction

Hybridization is the production of offspring between genetically distinct individuals (Harrison 1993), and the fitness of hybrids has fundamental implications for the populations involved. The fitness of F1 hybrids produced from genetically distinct populations will determine the extent of gene flow and strength of selection (Butlin 1987). Fertile hybrids enable gene flow among sympatric populations that might eventually result in loss of phenotypic and genetic distinctiveness. Where fertile hybrids create gene flow, three factors will reduce the probability of reinforcement; (1) recombination among genes influencing hybrid fitness and between genes for assortative mating, (2) gene flow from outside the contact zone, and (3) stabilizing selection on the mate recognition system (Butlin 1987).

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