Authors
Billy Tene Fossog, Diego Ayala, Pelayo Acevedo, Pierre Kengne, Ignacio Ngomo Abeso Mebuy, Boris Makanga, Julie Magnus, Parfait Awono‐Ambene, Flobert Njiokou, Marco Pombi, Christophe Antonio‐Nkondjio, Christophe Paupy, Nora J Besansky, Carlo Costantini
Publication date
2015/4
Journal
Evolutionary applications
Volume
8
Issue
4
Pages
326-345
Description
Understanding how divergent selection generates adaptive phenotypic and population diversification provides a mechanistic explanation of speciation in recently separated species pairs. Towards this goal, we sought ecological gradients of divergence between the cryptic malaria vectors Anopheles coluzzii and An. gambiae and then looked for a physiological trait that may underlie such divergence. Using a large set of occurrence records and eco‐geographic information, we built a distribution model to predict the predominance of the two species across their range of sympatry. Our model predicts two novel gradients along which the species segregate: distance from the coastline and altitude. Anopheles coluzzii showed a ‘bimodal’ distribution, predominating in xeric West African savannas and along the western coastal fringe of Africa. To test whether differences in salinity tolerance underlie this habitat …
Total citations
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