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University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Series

2018

Speciation

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Biology

A Probable Case Of Incipient Speciation In Schizocosa Wolf Spiders Driven By Allochrony, Habitat Use, And Female Mate Choice, R. Tucker Gilman, Kasey Fowler-Finn, Eileen A. Hebets Jun 2018

A Probable Case Of Incipient Speciation In Schizocosa Wolf Spiders Driven By Allochrony, Habitat Use, And Female Mate Choice, R. Tucker Gilman, Kasey Fowler-Finn, Eileen A. Hebets

School of Biological Sciences: Faculty Publications

There is growing evidence that speciation can occur between populations that are not geographically isolated. The emergence of assortative mating is believed to be critical to this process, but how assortative mating arises in diverging populations is poorly understood. The wolf spider genus Schizocosa has become a model system for studying mechanisms of assortative mating. We conducted a series of experiments to identify the factors that control mate-pair formation in a Schizocosa population that includes both ornamented and nonornamented males. We show that the population also includes two previously unrecognized female phenotypes. One female phenotype mates mostly or exclusively with …


Evidence For Trait-Based Dominance In Occupancy Among Fossil Taxa And The Decoupling Of Macroecological And Macroevolutionary Success, Peter Wagner, Roy E. Plotnick, S. Kathleen Lyons Jan 2018

Evidence For Trait-Based Dominance In Occupancy Among Fossil Taxa And The Decoupling Of Macroecological And Macroevolutionary Success, Peter Wagner, Roy E. Plotnick, S. Kathleen Lyons

School of Biological Sciences: Faculty Publications

Biological systems provide examples of differential success among taxa, from ecosystems with a few dominant species (ecological success) to clades that possess far more species than sister clades (macroevolutionary success). Macroecological success, the occupation by a species or clade of an unusually high number of areas, has received less attention. If macroecological success reflects heritable traits, then successful species should be related. Genera composed of species possessing those traits should occupy more areas than genera with comparable species richness that lack such traits. Alternatively, if macroecological success reflects autapomorphic traits, then generic occupancy should be a by-product of species richness …