Journal article

Spatio-temporal changes in the structure of an australian frog hybrid zone: A 40-year perspective

KL Smith, JM Hale, L Gay, M Kearney, JJ Austin, KM Parris, J Melville

Evolution | Published : 2013

Abstract

Spatio-temporal studies of hybrid zones provide an opportunity to test evolutionary hypotheses of hybrid zone maintenance and movement. We conducted a landscape genetics study on a classic hybrid zone of the south-eastern Australian frogs, Litoria ewingii and Litoria paraewingi. This hybrid zone has been comprehensively studied since the 1960s, providing the unique opportunity to directly assess changes in hybrid zone structure across time. We compared both mtDNA and male advertisement call data from two time periods (present and 1960s). Clinal analysis of the coincidence (same center) and concordance (same width) of these traits indicated that the center of the hybrid zone has shifted 1 km ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was primarily funded by an Australian Research Council Linkage grant awarded to MK, JM, KP, and JA (LP0667815). Additional support was also provided to KS from Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment and Jasper Loftus-Hills Memorial Award. We thank the residents of the Kinglake-Glenburn region that allowed us access to their properties for field surveys and the field work volunteers. We also thank M. Littlejohn, C. Hoskin, D. Chapple, and C. Moritz for valuable comments on earlier versions of the manuscript.