Joscha Beninde
University of Tübingen
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Featured researches published by Joscha Beninde.
Ecology Letters | 2015
Geoffrey M. While; Sozos Michaelides; Robert J. P. Heathcote; Hannah E. A. MacGregor; Natalia Zajac; Joscha Beninde; Pau Carazo; Guillem Pérez i de Lanuza; Roberto Sacchi; Marco A.L. Zuffi; Terézia Horváthová; Belén Fresnillo; Ulrich Schulte; Michael Veith; Axel Hochkirch; Tobias Uller
Hybridisation is increasingly recognised as an important cause of diversification and adaptation. Here, we show how divergence in male secondary sexual characters between two lineages of the common wall lizard (Podarcis muralis) gives rise to strong asymmetries in male competitive ability and mating success, resulting in asymmetric hybridisation upon secondary contact. Combined with no negative effects of hybridisation on survival or reproductive characters in F1-hybrids, these results suggest that introgression should be asymmetric, resulting in the displacement of sexual characters of the sub-dominant lineage. This prediction was confirmed in two types of secondary contact, across a natural contact zone and in two introduced populations. Our study illustrates how divergence in sexually selected traits via male competition can determine the direction and extent of introgression, contributing to geographic patterns of genetic and phenotypic diversity.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Rolanda Lange; Tobias Gerlach; Joscha Beninde; Johanna Werminghausen; Verena Reichel; Nils Anthes
Traumatic mating behaviors often bear signatures of sexual conflict and are then typically considered a male strategy to circumvent female choice mechanisms. In an extravagant mating ritual, the hermaphroditic sea slug Siphopteron quadrispinosum pierces the integument of their mating partners with a syringe-like penile stylet that injects prostate fluids. Traumatic injection is followed by the insertion of a spiny penis into the partner’s gonopore to transfer sperm. Despite traumatic mating, field mating rates exceed those required for female fertilization insurance, possibly because costs imposed on females are balanced by direct or indirect benefits of multiple sperm receipt. To test this idea, we exposed animals to a relevant range of mating opportunity regimes and assessed the effects on mating behavior and proxies of female fitness. We find penis intromission duration to decrease with mating rates, and a female fecundity maximum at intermediate mating rates. The latter finding indicates that benefits beyond fertilization insurance can make higher mating rates also beneficial from a female perspective in this traumatically mating species.
Molecular Ecology | 2016
Joscha Beninde; Stephan Feldmeier; Maike Werner; Daniel Peroverde; Ulrich Schulte; Axel Hochkirch; Michael Veith
Functional connectivity is essential for the long‐term persistence of populations. However, many studies assess connectivity with a focus on structural connectivity only. Cityscapes, namely urban landscapes, are particularly dynamic and include numerous potential anthropogenic barriers to animal movements, such as roads, traffic or buildings. To assess and compare structural connectivity of habitats and functional connectivity of gene flow of an urban lizard, we here combined species distribution models (SDMs) with an individual‐based landscape genetic optimization procedure. The most important environmental factors of the SDMs are structural diversity and substrate type, with high and medium levels of structural diversity as well as open and rocky/gravel substrates contributing most to structural connectivity. By contrast, water cover was the best model of all environmental factors following landscape genetic optimization. The river is thus a major barrier to gene flow, while of the typical anthropogenic factors only buildings showed an effect. Nonetheless, using SDMs as a basis for landscape genetic optimization provided the highest ranked model for functional connectivity. Optimizing SDMs in this way can provide a sound basis for models of gene flow of the cityscape, and elsewhere, while presence‐only and presence–absence modelling approaches showed differences in performance. Additionally, interpretation of results based on SDM factor importance can be misleading, dictating more thorough analyses following optimization of SDMs. Such approaches can be adopted for management strategies, for example aiming to connect native common wall lizard populations or disconnect them from non‐native introduced populations, which are currently spreading in many cities in Central Europe.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2018
Joscha Beninde; Stephan Feldmeier; Michael Veith; Axel Hochkirch
Introductions of non-native lineages increase opportunities for hybridization. Non-native lineages of the common wall lizard, Podarcis muralis, are frequently introduced in cities where they hybridize with native populations. We aimed at unravelling the invasion history and admixture of native and non-native wall lizards in four German cities using citywide, comprehensive sampling. We barcoded and genotyped 826 lizards and tested if gene flow in populations composed of admixed native and introduced lineages is facilitated by similar environmental factors to those in native populations by comparing fine-scale landscape genetic patterns. In cities with non-native lineages, lizards commonly occurred in numerous clusters of hybrid swarms, which showed variable lineage composition, consisting of up to four distinct evolutionary lineages. Hybrid swarms held vast genetic diversity and showed recent admixture with other hybrid swarms. Landscape genetic analyses showed differential effects of cityscape structures across cities, but identified water bodies as strong barriers to gene flow in both native and admixed populations. By contrast, railway tracks facilitated gene flow of admixed populations only. Our study shows that cities represent unique settings for hybridization, caused by multiple introductions of non-native taxa. Cityscape structure and invasion histories of cities will determine future evolutionary pathways at these novel hybrid zones.
Ecology Letters | 2015
Joscha Beninde; Michael Veith; Axel Hochkirch
Conservation Letters | 2013
Axel Hochkirch; Thomas Schmitt; Joscha Beninde; Marietta Hiery; Tim Kinitz; Jenny Kirschey; Daniela Matenaar; Katja Rohde; Aleke Stoefen; Norman Wagner; Andreas Zink; Stefan Lötters; Michael Veith; Alexander Proelss
Conservation Letters | 2015
Joscha Beninde; Marietta L. Fischer; Axel Hochkirch; Andreas Zink
Animal Behaviour | 2012
Rolanda Lange; Joscha Beninde; Verena Reichel; Johanna Werminghausen; Tobias Gerlach; Nils Anthes
Diversity and Distributions | 2017
Marietta L. Fischer; Iván Salgado; Joscha Beninde; Roland Klein; Alain C. Frantz; Mike Heddergott; Catherine I. Cullingham; Christopher J. Kyle; Axel Hochkirch
Conservation Letters | 2013
Axel Hochkirch; Thomas Schmitt; Joscha Beninde; Marietta Hiery; Tim Kinitz; Jenny Kirschey; Daniela Matenaar; Katja Rohde; Aleke Stoefen; Norman Wagner; Andreas Zink; Stefan Lötters; Michael Veith; Alexander Proelss