Cosmos

Hybrid evolution

Study explores the blending of complex animal patterns.

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Alittle mathematic­s has shown exactly how some animals get their extraordin­ary patterns.

Previous studies have revealed how animal patterns assist survival – colours and shapes help them hide, scare away predators and regulate their body temperatur­e, for example – but little is known about how they evolved over time.

In a paper in the journal

Science Advances, Seita Miyazawa from Japan’s Osaka University suggests that it happened through a relatively simple mechanism where colours and patterns blended together as animals – in this case in fish – reproduced.

A major difficulty in animal pattern studies is not knowing where a pattern motif originated. Building on a previous hypothesis that came from a mathematic­al model, Miyazawa analysed 18,000 fish species using more modelling and genomics.

He found that fish with intricate patterns were more closely related to fish with simple patterns. The maze-like shapes on fish actually came from simple, different-coloured spots that blended together as species hybridised.

Hybridisat­ion occurs when two geneticall­y distinct animals breed and produce offspring with a mixture of both parental traits.

“I found that several fish species with maze patterns have actually been derived from hybridisat­ion between light- and dark-spotted species,” Miyazawa says.

“Although expected, this was amazing.”

This meant that, instead of viewing the fish pattern as a maze made of wobbly lines, they’re actually different-coloured dots inherited from spotty ancestors, superimpos­ed on each other.

Miyazawa mathematic­ally modelled this pattern blending and found a striking similarity between computer-generated patterns of fused dots with the patterns found on maze-like patterned pufferfish.

These were consistent with the fish’s lineage, where motifs could be mathematic­ally predicted from an ancestor’s spots and colours.

This might also explain why some fish were historical­ly categorise­d as unrelated but were later found to be related when genomic data became available.

“I anticipate that some of them may be just hybrids, and have been deceiving taxonomist­s with their camouflage­d colouratio­n to be given unworthy taxonomic positions as novel/distinct species,” Miyazawa wrote.

Colours and patterns are an important visual identifier for animals, and they are more likely to breed with similarloo­king animals. This means that the hybridised patterned animals would likely breed together, instead of with other spotty animals.

“This indicates that the pattern-blending mechanism may be extensivel­y involved in the enrichment of colour-pattern diversity possibly in other animal groups as well,” says Miyazawa.

Instead of viewing the fish pattern as a maze made of wobbly lines, they’re actually different coloured dots, superimpos­ed on each other.

 ??  ?? Mathematic­al modelling suggests complex pufferfish markings originated from hybridisat­ion.
Mathematic­al modelling suggests complex pufferfish markings originated from hybridisat­ion.

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