posted on 2017-12-29, 15:45authored byJan W. Arntzen, Jacob McAtear, Roland Butôt, Iñigo Martínez-Solano
We document the distribution of the common toad Bufo
bufo and the spined toad B. spinosus at their contact zone across
France with data from a mitochondrial DNA RFLP assay, complementing similar
work including nuclear markers in the northwest and southeast of France and in
Italy. We also reconstruct geographical clines across the species’ contact zone
in central France. Bufo bufo is found in the north-eastern half of
France. Bufo spinosus is found in the south-western complement. The
contact zone they form runs from the Atlantic coast near Caen, France, to the
Mediterranean coast near Savona, Italy, and has a length of over 900 km. In
central France B. bufo and B. spinosus engage in a hybrid zone
with a unimodal genetic signature. Hybrid zone width is ca. 10 km at
mitochondrial DNA and averages at 61 km for four nuclear loci. The hybrid zone
is distinctly asymmetric with a signature of B. spinosus in B. bufo and
not the other way round. We attribute this observation to B. bufo moving
southwards at the expense of B. spinosus, with introgression in the
direction of the advancing species. We noted substantial geographic variation
in characters for species identification. Morphological species identification
performs well in France, but breaks down in Italy. Mitochondrial DNA is
inconclusive in south-eastern France and Italy. The nuclear genetic markers
perform consistently well but have not yet been applied to the zone in full. Possible,
but surely heterogeneous ecological correlates for the position of the hybrid
zone are mountains and rivers.