Abstract

In many animals, mate choice is important for the maintenance of reproductive isolation between species. Traits important for mate choice and behavioral isolation are predicted to be under strong stabilizing selection within species; however, such traits can also exhibit variation at the population level driven by neutral and adaptive evolutionary processes. Here, we describe patterns of divergence among androconial and genital chemical profiles at inter‐ and intraspecific levels in mimetic Heliconius butterflies. Most variation in chemical bouquets was found between species, but there were also quantitative differences at the population level. We found a strong correlation between interspecific chemical and genetic divergence, but this correlation varied in intraspecific comparisons. We identified “indicator” compounds characteristic of particular species that included compounds already known to elicit a behavioral response, suggesting an approach for identification of candidate compounds for future behavioral studies in novel systems. Overall, the strong signal of species identity suggests a role for these compounds in species recognition, but with additional potentially neutral variation at the population level.

Highlights

  • Reproductive isolation between lineages is important for the maintenance of species diversity (Coyne & Orr, 2004)

  • Related species often differ in traits important for mate choice, with individuals displaying a preference for conspecific phenotypes

  • We investigated each term in the model sequentially, starting with species identity, the main clustering factor found from visualisation with non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS), followed by geographic region (Panama vs Western Andes vs Eastern Andes vs Amazon), and individual collecting localities

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Summary

Introduction

Reproductive isolation between lineages is important for the maintenance of species diversity (Coyne & Orr, 2004). Mate choice provides a strong pre-mating barrier, maintaining reproductive isolation Related species often differ in traits important for mate choice, with individuals displaying a preference for conspecific phenotypes 2014; Saveer et al, 2014; Yildizhan et al, 2009) These traits are predicted to show strong species-specific differences (Gerhardt, 1982), and typically should be subject to stabilising selection which can act to decrease intraspecific phenotypic variation (Butlin, Hewitt, & Webb, 1985; Pfennig, 1998; Ptacek, 2000). We would expect to find little trait variability, or at least certain features to be invariant, across species geographic ranges

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