Authors
Kyle E Jaynes, Edward A Myers, Václav Gvoždík, David C Blackburn, Daniel M Portik, Eli Greenbaum, Gregory FM Jongsma, Mark‐Oliver Rödel, Gabriel Badjedjea, Abraham Bamba‐Kaya, Ninda L Baptista, Jeannot B Akuboy, Raffael Ernst, Marcel T Kouete, Chifundera Kusamba, Franck M Masudi, Patrick J McLaughlin, Lotanna M Nneji, Abiodun B Onadeko, Johannes Penner, Pedro Vaz Pinto, Bryan L Stuart, Elie Tobi, Ange‐Ghislain Zassi‐Boulou, Adam D Leaché, Matthew K Fujita, Rayna C Bell
Publication date
2022/8
Journal
Molecular Ecology
Volume
31
Issue
15
Pages
3979-3998
Description
Secondary sympatry amongst sister lineages is strongly associated with genetic and ecological divergence. This pattern suggests that for closely related species to coexist in secondary sympatry, they must accumulate differences in traits that mediate ecological and/or reproductive isolation. Here, we characterized inter‐ and intraspecific divergence in three giant tree frog species whose distributions stretch across West and Central Africa. Using genome‐wide single‐nucleotide polymorphism data, we demonstrated that species‐level divergence coincides temporally and geographically with a period of large‐scale forest fragmentation during the late Pliocene. Our environmental niche models further supported a dynamic history of climatic suitability and stability, and indicated that all three species occupy distinct environmental niches. We found modest morphological differentiation amongst the species with …
Total citations
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