Quaternary refugia in tropical America: evidence from race formation inHeliconiusbutterflies
- 5 November 1974
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences
- Vol. 187 (1088) , 369-378
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1974.0082
Abstract
The hypothesis of Haffer, Turner, and others, that patterns of race and species formation in the tropical forests of South America are the result of the isolation of populations in forest refugia during widespread climatic changes in the geologically recent past, is supported by the distribution of races in the butterfly genusHeliconius: the location of the refuges for these butterflies shows an excellent accord with the refuges deduced by Haffer in his studies of forest birds. The strict parallel variation through most of South America of the various races ofH. melpomene, H. eratoand of ten similarly-patterned species shows the result of selection for Müllerian mimicry; as the patterns must be subject to strong stabilizing selection, and as the low vagility of the butterflies normally produces isolation by distance even in a continuous population, it is suggested that the extreme divergence of pattern that some (but not all)Heliconiusunderwent in the forest refugia results from selection pressure in favour of mimicking the most abundant or distasteful local species, which would vary from refuge to refuge, rather than from geographical isolationper se.Keywords
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