December 17, 2017
THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS SPECIES:
New Bird Species Arises From Hybrids, as Scientists Watch (Jordana Cepelewicz, December 13, 2017, Quanta)
In 1981, Peter and Rosemary Grant, the famous husband-and-wife team of evolutionary biologists at Princeton University, had already been studying Darwin's finches on the small Galápagos island Daphne Major for nearly a decade. So when they spotted a male bird that looked and sounded different from the three species residing on the island, they immediately knew he didn't belong. Genetic analysis showed he was a large cactus finch (Geospiza conirostris) from another island, either Española or Gardner, more than 60 miles away -- too great a distance for the bird to fly home.Tracking the marooned male bird's activity, the Grants observed him as he mated with two female medium ground finches (G. fortis) on Daphne and produced hybrid offspring. Such interbreeding by isolated animals in the wild is not uncommon, though biologists have usually dismissed it as irrelevant to evolution because the hybrids tend to be unfit. Often they cannot reproduce, or they fail to compete effectively against established species and quickly go extinct. Even when the hybrids are fertile and fit, they frequently get reabsorbed into the original species by mating with their parent populations.But something different happened with the hybrids on Daphne: When they matured, they became a population distinct from Daphne's other bird species by inbreeding extensively and exclusively -- siblings mating with siblings, and parents mating with their offspring.In short, an incipient hybrid species, which the researchers dubbed the Big Bird lineage, had emerged within two generations. Today, six generations have passed, and the island is home to around 30 Big Bird finches. "If you were a biologist none the wiser to what had happened," said Leif Andersson, a geneticist at Uppsala University in Sweden and one of the study's co-authors, "and you started studying these birds, you'd think there were four different species on the island."
Instead, the fact that all finches can easily interbreed shows that they don't speciate.
Posted by Orrin Judd at December 17, 2017 11:23 AM
