Multiple, recurring origins of aposematism and diet specialization in poison frogs
- †Section of Integrative Biology C0930, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712; and ‡Escuela de Biología, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Avenida 12 de Octubre y Roca, Apartado 17-01-2184, Quito, Ecuador
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Edited by David B. Wake, University of California, Berkeley, CA, and approved August 22, 2003 (received for review June 9, 2003)
Abstract
Aposematism is the association, in a prey organism, of the presence of a warning signal with unprofitability to predators. The origin of aposematism is puzzling, because of its predicted low probability of establishment in a population due to the prey's increased conspicuousness. Aposematism is a widespread trait in invertebrate taxa, but, in vertebrates, it is mostly evident in amphibians, reptiles, and fishes. Poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) are one of the most well known examples of the co-occurrence of warning coloration and toxicity. This monophyletic group of mostly diurnal leaf-litter Neotropical anurans has both toxic/colorful and palatable/cryptic species. Previous studies suggested a single origin of toxicity and warning coloration, dividing the family in two discrete groups of primitively cryptic and more derived aposematic frogs. Recent molecular phylogenetic analyses using mostly aposematic taxa supported this conclusion and proposed a single tandem origin of toxicity and conspicuous warning coloration. By using expanded taxon and character sampling, we reexamined the phylogenetic correlation between the origins of toxicity and warning coloration. At least four or five independent origins of aposematism have occurred within poison frogs; by using simulations, we rejected hypotheses of one, two, or three origins of aposematism (P < 0.002). We also found that diet specialization is linked with the evolution of aposematism. Specialization on prey, such as ants and termites, may have evolved independently at least two times.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Section of Integrative Biology C0930, 1 University Station, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712. E-mail: jcsantos{at}mail.utexas.edu.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
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Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AY364538–AY364580).
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See commentary on page 12533.
- Copyright © 2003, The National Academy of Sciences
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