Authors
Iliana Medina, Caroline Dong, Roberto Marquez, Daniela M Perez, Ian J Wang, Devi Stuart-Fox
Publication date
2024/1/24
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Volume
291
Issue
2015
Pages
20232292
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Predator–prey interactions have been suggested as drivers of diversity in different lineages, and the presence of anti-predator defences in some clades is linked to higher rates of diversification. Warning signals are some of the most widespread defences in the animal world, and there is evidence of higher diversification rates in aposematic lineages. The mechanisms behind such species richness, however, are still unclear. Here, we test whether lineages that use aposematism as anti-predator defence exhibit higher levels of genetic differentiation between populations, leading to increased opportunities for divergence. We collated from the literature more than 3000 pairwise genetic differentiation values across more than 700 populations from over 60 amphibian species. We find evidence that over short geographical distances, populations of species of aposematic lineages exhibit greater genetic divergence relative …
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Scholar articles
I Medina, C Dong, R Marquez, DM Perez, IJ Wang… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2024