Date: October 3, 2019
Source: Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
The
old saying that people marry their parents may be true for poison dart
frogs, and it may even lead to the formation of new species, according
to a new study in Nature based on work at the Smithsonian Tropical
Research Institute (STRI).
Strawberry
poison dart frogs live on the mainland in Panama's Bocas del Toro
province and have been isolated on islands in the archipelago that
formed during the past 10 million years as sea level rose. Only a single
color morph exists on some islands -- orange or green, for example, but
on other islands several color morphs exist together, like blue and red
frogs.
"In
the past, people assumed that this group of brightly colored poison
dart frogs were warning predators that their skin is toxic," said
Corinne Richards-Zawacki, research associate at STRI and professor of
biological sciences at the University of Pittsburgh. "But predators
don't seem to care what color the frogs are, at least based on our
earlier experiments. That's why we started asking whether the way they
choose mates might lead to populations of different colors on different
islands.”
The
team set up three different situations: baby frogs raised with two
parents of the same color (red baby, red parents), baby frogs raised
with each parent a different color (red baby, one red and one blue
parent) and baby frogs raised by foster parents of a different color
(red baby, blue parents). In each case they asked which color the female
offspring would choose as mates and which color the male offspring
would perceive as a rival.
"We
discovered that female frogs with parents of the same color tended to
choose mates of that same color, whereas frogs with foster parents of a
different color would choose mates the color of the foster parents,"
said Yusan Yang, who is completing her doctoral thesis at the University
of Pitts-burgh. "The same was true for male-male aggression. This tells
us that imprinting was more important than genetics when it comes to
shaping these behaviors that are based on color.”
When
baby frogs were raised with one parent of the same color and one parent
of a different color, females chose mates the color of their mother,
and males chose rivals the color of their mother, indicating that
maternal imprinting was probably more important than paternal
imprinting.
They
also created a mathematical model showing that male aggression based on
imprinting, in concert with female mate choice based on imprinting was
enough to cause a scenario to evolve, where like mates with like, which
could lead to two color morphs becoming separate species.
"We're fascinated by the idea that behavior can play such an important role in evolution," Richards-Zawacki said.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
- Yusan Yang, Maria R. Servedio, Corinne L. Richards-Zawacki. Imprinting sets the stage for speciation. Nature, 2019; 574 (7776): 99 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1599-z
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Smithsonian
Tropical Research Institute. "Imprinting on mothers may drive new
species formation in poison dart frogs: What do marrying one's parents,
Oedipus complex have to do with evolution?." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily,
3 October 2019.
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