Abstract

Abstract Life-cycle polyphenism has been hypothesized to facilitate ecological speciation in salamanders. A recent study demonstrated that the Eastern Newt (Notophthalmus viridescens) subspecies genetically differ in expression of life-cycle polyphenism. However, we currently lack direct evidence that the life-history divergence among the newt subspecies is associated with the suggested ecological parameters, namely availability of wetlands and suitable terrestrial habitats. To test such associations, we examined life-history traits of two subspecies, Notophthalmus viridescens viridescens and Notophthalmus viridescens dorsalis, across the subspecies boundary, which corresponds with changes in those ecological parameters between the Piedmont Plateau and the Coastal Plain. We reared larval newts derived from the two focal subspecies across the contact zone in outdoor mesocosms under two different hydroperiod treatments (three-month drying and permanent water). We found striking genetically based differences...

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