Data

Data from: More than bindin divergence: reproductive isolation between sympatric subspecies of a sea urchin by asynchronous spawning

The University of Western Australia
Binks, Rachel Maria ; Prince, Jane Eleanor ; Evans, Jonathan Paul ; Kennington, Winn
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.5061/dryad.1b549&rft.title=Data from: More than bindin divergence: reproductive isolation between sympatric subspecies of a sea urchin by asynchronous spawning&rft.identifier=10.5061/dryad.1b549&rft.publisher=DRYAD&rft.description= Sex Ratio.txt (1.639 Kb) Spawning Data.txt (1.94 Kb) GSI Data.txt (1.082 Kb) The evolution of reproductive barriers is crucial to the process of speciation. In the Echinoidea, studies have focused on divergence in the gamete recognition protein, bindin, as the primary isolating mechanism among species. As such, the capacity of alternate mechanisms to be effective reproductive barriers and the phylogenetic context in which they arise is unclear. Here, we examine the evolutionary histories and factors limiting gene exchange between two subspecies of Heliocidaris erythrogramma that occur sympatrically in Western Australia. We found low, but significant differentiation between the subspecies in two mitochondrial genes. Further, coalescent analyses suggest that they diverged in isolation on the east and west coasts of Australia, with a subsequent range expansion of H. e. erythrogramma into Western Australia. Differentiation in bindin was minimal, indicating gamete incompatibility is an unlikely reproductive barrier. We did, however, detect strong asynchrony in spawning seasons; H. e. erythrogramma spawned over summer while H. e. armigera spawned in autumn. Taken together, we provide compelling evidence for a recent divergence of these subspecies and their reproductive isolation without gamete incompatibility. Western Australian H. erythrogramma may therefore present an intriguing case of incipient speciation, which depends on long-term persistence of the factors underlying this spawning asynchrony.&rft.creator=Binks, Rachel Maria &rft.creator=Prince, Jane Eleanor &rft.creator=Evans, Jonathan Paul &rft.creator=Kennington, Winn &rft.date=2012&rft.relation=http://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/en/publications/cec54e06-2030-4047-a510-8d3f98cde91f&rft.coverage=Western Australia, Eastern Australia&rft_subject=Reproductive Isolation&rft_subject=Speciation&rft_subject=Heliocidaris erythrogramma&rft_subject=Heliocidaris erythrogramma armigera&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Sex Ratio.txt (1.639 Kb)
Spawning Data.txt (1.94 Kb)
GSI Data.txt (1.082 Kb)

The evolution of reproductive barriers is crucial to the process of speciation. In the Echinoidea, studies have focused on divergence in the gamete recognition protein, bindin, as the primary isolating mechanism among species. As such, the capacity of alternate mechanisms to be effective reproductive barriers and the phylogenetic context in which they arise is unclear. Here, we examine the evolutionary histories and factors limiting gene exchange between two subspecies of Heliocidaris erythrogramma that occur sympatrically in Western Australia. We found low, but significant differentiation between the subspecies in two mitochondrial genes. Further, coalescent analyses suggest that they diverged in isolation on the east and west coasts of Australia, with a subsequent range expansion of H. e. erythrogramma into Western Australia. Differentiation in bindin was minimal, indicating gamete incompatibility is an unlikely reproductive barrier. We did, however, detect strong asynchrony in spawning seasons; H. e. erythrogramma spawned over summer while H. e. armigera spawned in autumn. Taken together, we provide compelling evidence for a recent divergence of these subspecies and their reproductive isolation without gamete incompatibility. Western Australian H. erythrogramma may therefore present an intriguing case of incipient speciation, which depends on long-term persistence of the factors underlying this spawning asynchrony.

Issued: 2012-05-04

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text: Western Australia, Eastern Australia

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