posted on 2020-03-06, 12:16authored byAdam Hermaniuk, Magdalena Czajkowska, Anetta Borkowska, Jan R. E. Taylor
In
some populations, hybrids reproduce with a parental species by eliminating the
genome of this species from their own germline and produce gametes that only contain
the genome of the other parental species (sexual host). This mode of
reproduction, known as hybridogenesis, leads to a conflict of interest between
the two parties because the sexual host should avoid mating with the hybrid to prevent
a reduction in reproductive success, whereas the hybrid depends on such matings
for survival. We investigated European water frogs (Pelophylax esculentus complex),
including hybrids (P. esculentus,genotype LR) and two sexual host
species (P. lessonae, LLand P.
ridibundus, RR). We hypothesized that to maximize fitness, hybrid males should
be morphologically more similar to the sexual host that is preferred by females
for successful reproduction. To test this hypothesis, we compared hybrid males
in two different population types, L-E (hybrids coexist with LL) and L-E-R
(hybrids coexist with both LL and RR). The latter was described in terms of
genome composition, sex ratio, and mate choice preferences; the sex ratio of
hybrids was significantly male-biased. We found that LR males from the L-E-R populations
were significantly larger than those from the L-E, which makes them more
similar to P. ridibundus,the largest species within the P. esculentus complex. We suggest that a
larger body size of hybrid males may provide a reproductive advantage in the
L-E-R population type, where the most common type of pair caught in the
breeding season was LR males × RR females.