Rader Jonathan A, Matute Daniel R
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, U.S.A.
Anim Behav. 2025 May;223. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2025.123168. Epub 2025 Apr 23.
Behavioural mating choices and mating success are important factors in the development of reproductive isolation during speciation. Environmental conditions, especially temperature, can affect these key traits. Environmental conditions can vary across, and frequently delimit, species' geographical ranges. Pairing suboptimal conditions with relative rarity of conspecifics at range margins may set the stage for hybridization. Despite the importance of mating behaviours as a reproductive barrier, a general understanding of the interaction between behavioural choices and the environment is lacking, in part because systematic studies are rare. With this report, we begin to bridge that gap by providing evidence that temperature has a significant but inconsistent influence on mating choices and success and, thus, on reproductive isolation in . We studied mating propensity and success at four different temperatures among 14 species in no-choice conspecific mating trials and in heterospecific trials among two species triads that are known to regularly hybridize in the wild. We found that mating frequency varied significantly across a 10 °C range (from 18 °C to 28 °C), both in 1:1 mating trials and in high-density en masse trials, but that the effect of temperature was highly species specific. We also found that mating frequency was consistently low and that temperature had a moderate effect on some heterospecific crosses. As conspecific mating propensity decreased outside of the optimal thermal range, while heterospecific matings remained constant, the proportion of heterospecific matings at suboptimal temperatures was relatively high. This result indicates that temperature can modulate behavioural choices that impose reproductive barriers and influence the rate of hybridization. More broadly, our results demonstrate that to truly understand how mating choice and reproductive isolation occur in nature, they need to be studied in an environmental context.
行为交配选择和交配成功率是物种形成过程中生殖隔离发展的重要因素。环境条件,尤其是温度,会影响这些关键特征。环境条件在物种的地理分布范围内可能会有所不同,并且常常会划定其范围。在分布范围边缘将次优条件与同种个体相对稀少的情况相结合,可能会为杂交创造条件。尽管交配行为作为一种生殖障碍很重要,但目前缺乏对行为选择与环境之间相互作用的全面理解,部分原因是系统研究很少见。在本报告中,我们开始填补这一空白,提供证据表明温度对交配选择和成功率以及对生殖隔离具有显著但不一致的影响。我们在无选择的同种交配试验以及已知在野外经常杂交的两个物种三元组的异种交配试验中,研究了14个物种在四种不同温度下的交配倾向和成功率。我们发现,在1:1交配试验和高密度群体试验中,交配频率在10°C的范围内(从18°C到28°C)均有显著变化,但温度的影响具有高度的物种特异性。我们还发现,交配频率一直很低,并且温度对一些异种杂交有中等影响。由于在最佳热范围之外同种交配倾向降低,而异种交配保持不变,因此在次优温度下异种交配的比例相对较高。这一结果表明,温度可以调节施加生殖障碍的行为选择,并影响杂交率。更广泛地说,我们的结果表明,要真正理解自然中交配选择和生殖隔离是如何发生的,就需要在环境背景下进行研究。