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The Journal of Heredity 2001:92(4)
© 2001 The American Genetic Association 92:309-314

A Narrow Hybrid Zone Between Two Cottus Species in Wills Creek, Potomac Drainage

A. P. Kinziger, and R. L. Raesly

From the Department of Biology, Frostburg State University, Frostburg, Maryland.

Address correspondence to Andrew P. Kinziger, Department of Biology, St. Louis University, 3507 Laclede Ave., St. Louis, MO 63103-2010, or Kinziger{at}slu.edu.

We describe a narrow hybrid zone between the mottled sculpin (Cottus b. bairdi) and the Blue Ridge sculpin (C. caeruleomentum). Seven characters (dorsal fin rays, pectoral fin rays, caudal base band condition, male spawning coloration, and one frequency and two fixed allozyme differences) distinguish the two taxa in the hybrid zone. C. caeruleomentum and C. b. bairdi diverged in these characters in allopatry as indicated by their distribution on opposite sides of the Atlantic–Ohio divide. However, a stream capture placed these two taxa in secondary contact in Wills Creek, Potomac drainage (Atlantic slope). Allozyme data indicate the presence of post-F1 hybrids in the zone of secondary contact. Changes in allozymes, morphology, and spawning coloration along a transect in Wills Creek reveal the hybrid zone is less than 20 river kilometers in length. Estimates of root mean square dispersal and gene flow tentatively suggest that selection is operating in the Wills Creek hybrid zone. C. b. bairdi and C. caeruleomentum are maintaining their identity in seven distinguishing characters on opposite ends of the hybrid zone revealing these two taxa are independent evolutionary lineages.


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