Detection of genetic and behavioural diversity within morphologically similar species has led to the discovery of cryptic species complexes. We tested the hypothesis that US populations of the canyon treefrog (Hyla arenicolor) may consist of cryptic species by examining mate-attraction signals among three divergent clades defined by mtDNA. Using a multi-locus approach, we re-analysed phylogenetic relationships among the three clades and a closely related, but morphologically and behaviourally dissimilar species, the Arizona treefrog (H. wrightorum). We found evidence for introgression of H. wrightorum's mitochondrial genome into H. arenicolor. Additionally, the two-clade topology based on nuclear data is more congruent with patterns of call variation than the three-clade topology from the mitochondrial dataset. The magnitude of the call divergence is probably insufficient to promote isolation of the nuclear DNA-defined clades should they become sympatric, but further divergence in call properties significant in species identification could promote speciation in the future. © 2010 The Authors. Journal Compilation © 2010 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.
CITATION STYLE
Klymus, K. E., Humfeld, S. C., Marshall, V. T., Cannatella, D., & Gerhardt, H. C. (2010). Molecular patterns of differentiation in canyon treefrogs (Hyla arenicolor): evidence for introgressive hybridization with the Arizona treefrog (H. wrightorum) and correlations with advertisement call differences. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 23(7), 1425–1435. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2010.02008.x
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