Abstract
Male genitalia are usually extremely divergent between closely related species, but relatively constant within one species. Here we examine the effect of temperature on the shape of the ventral branches, a male genital structure involved in reproductive isolation, in the sister species Drosophila santomea and D. yakuba. We designed a semi-automatic measurement pipeline that can reliably identify curvatures and landmarks based on manually digitized contours of the ventral branches. With this method, we observed that temperature does not affect ventral branches in D. yakuba but that in D. santomea ventral branches tend to morph into a D. yakuba-like shape at lower temperature. Our results suggest that speciation of D. santomea and D. yakuba was associated with a change in genitalia plasticity.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
↵a alex.peluffo{at}icloud.com
↵b m_hamdani{at}outlook.fr
↵c alejandra.vargas-valderrama{at}inserm.fr
↵d Jean.David{at}egce.cnrs-gif.fr
↵e francois.mallard{at}ens.fr
↵f francois.graner{at}univ-paris-diderot.fr
↵g virginie.courtier{at}normalesup.org
This version of the manuscript has been revised to update the introduction and discussion of the results. No new data is presented compared to the first version.
https://datadryad.org/stash/share/72YV3b0V2AELCpWuS_ULqMlZyORs9WILt6iMiInAkpE
Abbreviations
- SE
- Standard Error
- QTL
- Quantitative Trait Locus
- ST
- spine thrust