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Reproductive isolation barriers in the hybrid zone of the house mouse (Mus musculus)
Albrechtová, Jana ; Piálek, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Sedláček, František (referee) ; Reifová, Radka (referee)
Reproductive isolation occurring at the gamete level is called gametic isolation and almost always prevents gene flow between unrelated species and (to some extent) between closely related species or subspecies. The hybrid zone of the house mouse (HMHZ), which was formed by contact and interbreeding of two subspecies, the Western European house mouse (M. m. domesticus) and the Eastern European house mouse (M. m. musculus) provides a usefull model for the study of speciation processes involving gametic isolation. The probability of sperm competition within the female reproductive tract is high in the house mouse because high levels of sexual promiscuity (in 20˗40 % of all reproductive cycles) have been observed in this species. Thus, the reproductive isolation at gametic level may be determined both by the phenotypic characteristics of sperm (the ability to outcompete heterospecific sperm in the process of sperm- sperm competition) and by the preference of the sperm of conspecific males in the female reproductive tract (cryptic female choice). In my Ph.D. thesis I tested the degree of affinity of male and female gametes reciprocally between the both subspecies of M. musculus and the phylogenetically more distant species M. spretus, which is characterized by a higher degree of promiscuity. Although a...

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