PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Ambre Ribardière AU - Elsa Pabion AU - Jérôme Coudret AU - Claire Daguin-Thiébaut AU - Céline Houbin AU - Stéphane Loisel AU - Sébastien Henry AU - Thomas Broquet TI - Sexual isolation with and without ecological isolation in marine isopods <em>J. albifrons</em> and <em>J. praehirsuta</em> AID - 10.1101/260489 DP - 2019 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 260489 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/08/260489.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/08/260489.full AB - Sexual barriers associated with mate choice are nearly always found to be associated with some level of ecological isolation between species. The independence and relative strength of sexual isolation are thus difficult to assess. Here we take advantage of a pair of isopod species (Jaera albifrons and J. praehirsuta) that show sexual isolation and coexist in populations where they share the same microhabitat or not (i.e. without or with ecological isolation). Using no-choice trials and a free-choice experimental population, we estimated the strength of sexual isolation between J. albifrons and J. praehirsuta individuals originating from these different ecological contexts. We found that sexual isolation is strong in presence and absence of ecological isolation, but that it is asymmetric and fails to prevent gene flow entirely. First-generation post-zygotic barriers were low, and there was no sexual isolation within J. praehirsuta across habitats. The J. albifrons / J. praehirsuta species pair thus provides an example where the role of sexual isolation as a barrier to gene flow i) does not depend upon current ecological isolation, ii) seems to have evolved independently of local ecological conditions, but iii) is insufficient to complete speciation entirely on its own.