TY - JOUR T1 - Remating responses are shaped by male post-copulatory manipulation but not reinforcement in <em>D. pseudoobscura</em> JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/072066 SP - 072066 AU - Jeremy S. Davis AU - Dean M. Castillo AU - Leonie C. Moyle Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/08/29/072066.abstract N2 - Both pre-mating and post-mating prezygotic behaviors have been shown to be the target of reinforcing selection, but it remains unclear whether remating behaviors experience reinforcement, although they can also influence offspring identity and limit formation of hybrids. Here we evaluated evidence for reinforcing selection on remating behaviors in D. pseudoobscura, by comparing remating traits in females from populations historically allopatric and sympatric with D. persimilis. We found that the propensity to remate was not higher in sympatric females, compared to allopatric females, regardless of whether the first mated male was heterospecific or conspecific. Moreover, remating behavior did not contribute to interspecific reproductive isolation among any population; that is, females showed no higher propensity to remate following a heterospecific first mating than they were following a conspecific first mating. Instead, we found that females are less likely to remate after initial matings with unfamiliar males, regardless of species identity, consistent with females being poorly defended against post-copulatory manipulation by males with whom they have not co-evolved. Our results are generally inconsistent with reinforcement on remating traits, and suggest that this behavior is more strongly shaped by the consequences of local antagonistic male-female interactions than interactions with heterospecifics. ER -