Absence of intrinsic post-zygotic incompatibilities in artificial crosses between sympatric coregonid species from upper Lake Constance

J Fish Biol. 2015 May;86(5):1601-11. doi: 10.1111/jfb.12673. Epub 2015 Apr 8.

Abstract

A full factorial crossing experiment with five females and five males of each of two coregonid species from upper Lake Constance was used to test for intrinsic post-zygotic incompatibilities during early ontogeny. Up until shortly before hatching, there was no difference in embryo mortality between homo and heterologous crosses. A maternal effect on mortality was found in both species, but paternal effects and female-male interactions were absent. Thus, genetic incompatibility during early ontogeny does not appear to prevent introgressive hybridization, suggesting that genetic divergence between these species is maintained primarily by pre-zygotic barriers. The recent genetic homogenizations of coregonid species flocks in European alpine lakes may have been caused by a flattening of adaptive landscapes through eutrophication, but intensive stocking with larvae obtained in hatcheries from artificially fertilized eggs is also likely to be a contributing factor. To safeguard diversity among sympatric coregonids, it is important to re-establish ecological conditions conducive to species divergence and to revise traditional management strategies.

Keywords: biodiversity; eutrophication; introgressive hybridization; speciation reversal; stocking.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Crosses, Genetic*
  • Embryo, Nonmammalian
  • Female
  • Hybridization, Genetic
  • Male
  • Reproduction / genetics*
  • Salmonidae / genetics*
  • Salmonidae / physiology
  • Species Specificity
  • Sympatry*