Comment on "female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates"

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Abstract

Chen and Pfennig (Reports, 20 March 2020, p. 1377) analyze the fitness consequences of hybridization in toads but do not account for differences in survival among progeny. Apparent fitness effects depend on families with anomalously low survival, yet survival is crucial to evolutionary fitness. This and other analytical shortcomings demonstrate that a conclusion of adaptive mate choice is not yet justified.

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Braun, M. J., Wilkinson, G. S., & Cade, B. S. (2020). Comment on “female toads engaging in adaptive hybridization prefer high-quality heterospecifics as mates.” Science, 370(6513). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abd3905

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