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New butterfly: high-alpine species from low-life parents.


Little bluish blu·ish also blue·ish  
adj.
Somewhat blue.



bluish·ness n.
 butterflies high in the Sierra Nevada mountains have an unusual history. Researchers report that these insects belong to one of the few animal species known to have arisen from crossbreeding crossbreeding /cross·breed·ing/ (-bred-ing) hybridization; the mating of organisms of different strains or species.

crossbreeding

hybridization; the mating of organisms of different strains or species, e.g.
 of two other species.

Crossbreeding of animal species isn't unusual in itself, explains Zachariah Gompert of Texas State University in San Marcos. But the descendants of most hybrid offspring meld back into the parent species or don't compete successfully against the parental lines.

The not-yet-named butterflies in the Lycaeides genus, however, flourish in the harsh zone above the timberline, where the parent species can't cope, Gompert and his colleagues say. When they began studying the high-elevation butterflies, team members already suspected that two neighboring species had played some role in the high-living population's history.

The upper-alpine species shared some DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 variations with Lycaeides idas from wet meadows on the western slopes of the mountains, and it has wing patterns like those of Lycaeides melissa from the drier eastern slopes. All these butterflies belong to the genus studied by 20th-century novelist Vladimir Nabokov.

Gompert and his colleagues did extensive genetic work on the three Sierra Nevada species. The pattern of markers and sequenced genes best fit the scenario of the high-alpine lineage arising from the other two species and later following its own evolutionary path, the researchers say in a paper that Science has posted online.

Some new hybrid species arise with an increase in the number of chromosomes. However, the butterfly hybrid has the same number of chromosomes as its parents do, so some other barrier must prevent it from interbreeding interbreeding

crossbreeding, as between half-breds.
 with those species.

Not only does the hybrid survive in a different habitat, says Gompert, but the butterflies strongly prefer as host plants a specialized high-altitude Astragalus astragalus /as·trag·a·lus/ (as-trag´ah-lus) talus.astrag´alar

as·trag·a·lus
n.
See talus.
 in the pea family. The parent species rely on other plants, such as alfalfa alfalfa (ălfăl`fə) or lucern (lsûn`), perennial leguminous plant (Medicago sativa  and lupines.

Moreover, the hybrid females have the unusual quirk of laying eggs on their host plant without glue, although the parent species use glue on their eggs. The eggs without glue quickly tumble off the plant, and that tumble protects the next generation. In winter, alpine gales blast away dried-up plants and any hitchhikers. However, eggs that fell to the ground hatch in spring near emerging shoots.

Botanists have already accepted the idea of this kind of hybrid species, such as some native sunflowers, says insect evolutionary ecologist Mark Scriber of Michigan State University Michigan State University, at East Lansing; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855. It opened in 1857 as Michigan Agricultural College, the first state agricultural college.  in East Lansing. As zoologists, "we'd been brainwashed brain·wash  
tr.v. brain·washed, brain·wash·ing, brain·wash·es
To subject to brainwashing.

n.
The process or an instance of brainwashing.
 into thinking hybrids are dead ends," he says.

Yet recent research has revealed animal species that seem to have come from hybrids, including the unusual tiger swallowtail butterflies that Scriber studies in the Appalachian Mountains.

Biologists have also recently proposed hybrid speciation to explain a new Rhagoletis fruit-eating fly that has appeared on an invasive honeysuckle honeysuckle, common name for some members of the Caprifoliaceae, a family comprised mostly of vines and shrubs of the Northern Hemisphere, especially abundant in E Asia and E North America.  shrub. Other teams report that they have re-created a type of Heliconius butterfly by crossbreeding two related species in the lab (SN: 6/17/06, p. 371).

Hybrid species with the same chromosome number as their parent species "may be more common than we thought possible," Scriber says.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, Susan
Publication:Science News
Date:Dec 2, 2006
Words:511
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