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Full-Text Articles in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Reproductive Character Displacement In Calopteryx Aequabilis And C. Maculata: Improving Species Recognition Through The Divergence Of Male Mating Preferences, Melissa Encinias
Reproductive Character Displacement In Calopteryx Aequabilis And C. Maculata: Improving Species Recognition Through The Divergence Of Male Mating Preferences, Melissa Encinias
Masters Theses, 2010-2019
An ongoing evolutionary question is how co-occurring species maintain reproductive barriers when they are morphologically, behaviorally, and ecologically similar. Without geographic isolation, traits involved in species recognition may be under selection to enhance reproductive barriers. Exaggerated trait differences between species in sympatric populations may reflect selection to reduce misdirected mating between species, or reproductive character displacement. While this phenomenon is widely recognized as an important stage in the speciation process, there is little direct evidence of this process in nature. In two North American damselfly species, Calopteryx aequabilis and C. maculata, wing pigmentation is sexually dimorphic and also shows …