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Female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates

Catherine Chen, Karin S. Pfennig

2020Science29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Choosing mates wisely Hybridization between species has long been seen as an accidental contributor to evolution in some cases and as a dead end in others. New evidence is emerging, however, that hybridization may have played important, and nonrandom, roles in adaptation. Chen and Pfennig describe just such a case where female Plains spadefoot toads preferentially choose males from another toad species, the Mexican spadefoot, as mates, but only under certain environmental conditions (see the Perspective by Zuk). The offspring of this preferred hybrid mating event have higher fitness than nonhybrids in the same environment. Thus, not only do hybrids have an advantage, but females of one species are exerting a selective influence on the other species. Science , this issue p. 1377 ; see also p. 1304

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMatingIntrogressionSexual selectionEvolutionary biologyMate choiceEcologyHybridZoologyGeneticsGeneBotanyAnimal Behavior and ReproductionPlant and animal studiesGenetic diversity and population structure
Female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates | Litcius