Abstract

Although interfertility is the key criterion upon which Mayr’s biological species concept is based, it has never been applied directly to delimit species under natural conditions. Our study fills this gap. We used the interfertility criterion to delimit two closely related oak species in a forest stand by analyzing the network of natural mating events between individuals. The results reveal two groups of interfertile individuals connected by only few mating events. These two groups were largely congruent with those determined using other criteria (morphological similarity, genotypic similarity and individual relatedness). Our study, therefore, shows that the analysis of mating networks is an effective method to delimit species based on the interfertility criterion, provided that adequate network data can be assembled. Our study also shows that although species boundaries are highly congruent across methods of species delimitation, they are not exactly the same. Most of the differences stem from assignment of individuals to an intermediate category. The discrepancies between methods may reflect a biological reality. Indeed, the interfertility criterion is an environment-dependant criterion as species abundances typically affect rates of hybridization under natural conditions. Thus, the methods of species delimitation based on the interfertility criterion are expected to give results slightly different from those based on environment-independent criteria (such as the genotypic similarity criteria). However, whatever the criterion chosen, the challenge we face when delimiting species is to summarize continuous but non-uniform variations in biological diversity. The grade of membership model that we use in this study appears as an appropriate tool.

Highlights

  • According to the biological species concept, the ability to interbreed is a defining property of species [1]

  • We investigate the congruence between four methods of species delimitation, derived from the biological, morphological, genotypic and phylogenetic species concepts (Table 1), by applying them to two hybridizing tree species living in sympatry

  • Species Delimitation based on Interfertility According to the AIC criterion, the best model for the mating network was the one with four extremal hypothetical nodes (EHNs), followed by the models with five and three EHNs (Figure S1 in File S1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

According to the biological species concept, the ability to interbreed (i.e. interfertility) is a defining property of species [1]. To our knowledge, the interfertility criterion has never been used to delimit species on the basis of mating events observed under natural conditions. [2]), plants [3], or insects [4]. [5,6]) because artificial crosses bypass some pre-mating barriers to hybridization: mating events observed under artificial conditions might not reflect what would naturally occur.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call