-Caveat Lector-

http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/ucsd-bud011601.html


Biologists uncover Darwin's 'missing evidence' for divergence of
species


Biologists at the University of California, San Diego have
demonstrated, in a study of the songs and genetics of a series of
interbreeding populations of warblers in central Asia, how one
species can diverge into two.

Their description of the intermediate forms of two reproductively
isolated populations of songbirds that no longer interbreed is
the "missing evidence"  that Darwin had hoped to use to support
his theory of natural selection, but was never able to find.

"One of the largest mysteries remaining in evolutionary biology
is exactly how one species can gradually diverge into two," says
Darren E. Irwin, a biologist at UCSD who headed the study,
detailed in the January 18 issue of the journal Nature.

"This process, known as speciation, is very difficult to study
because it can take a great deal of time to occur."Biologists
have generally learned about the divergence of species by
comparing many different species at various stages of speciation.

But in their study of the greenish warbler, a songbird that
breeds in forests throughout much of temperate Asia, Irwin and
his colleagues—Trevor D. Price, a biology professor at UCSD,
and Staffan Bensch, a former postdoctoral student at UCSD now at
Sweden’s LundUniversity—discovered a rare situation known to
biologists as a "ring species."

"Ring species are unique because they present all levels of
variation, from small differences between neighboring populations
to species-level differences, in a single group of organisms,"
says Irwin, a former student of Price who is in the process of
beginning his postdoctoral work with Bensch at Lund University.

In the case of the greenish warbler, Phylloscopus trochiloides,
the scientists discovered a continuous ring of populations with
gradually changing behavioral and genetic characteristics
encircling the Tibetan Plateau, which is treeless and
uninhabitable. This ring is broken by a species boundary at only
one place, in central Siberia, where two forms of the songbird
coexist without interbreeding.

"This creates a paradox in which the two co-existing forms can be
considered as two species and as a single species at the same
time," says Irwin. "Such ring species are extremely rare, but
they are valuable because they can show all of the intermediate
steps that occurred during the divergence of one species into
two.

"In their paper, the scientists show how they discovered a
gradual variation in the song patterns, morphology and genetic
markers of 15 populations of the greenish warbler. At each end of
the ring of interbreeding populations, which extend around each
side of the Tibetan plateau and through the Himalayas, the
scientists found that the two distinct, non-interbreeding forms
of the bird do not recognize each other’s songs, which are
critical in the selection of their mates. They determined this
from experiments in which they played recordings of male greenish
warbler songs and judged the response of other birds in the
trees.

"In the greenish warbler, as in most songbirds, males sing to
attract mates and to defend territories," says Irwin. "The
greenish warblers living in the Himalayas sing songs that are
simple, short and repetitive. As you go north along the western
side of Tibet, moving through central Asia, the songs gradually
become longer and more complex. On the eastern side of the ring,
moving northwards through China, songs also become longer and
more complex, but the structure is different than on the western
side. Where the birds meet in Siberia, their songs are so
different that they do not recognize each other as mates or
competitors. They act like separate species, and the genetic
evidence supports that conclusion.

"Apparently, as the birds moved north along two pathways into the
forests of Siberia, their songs became longer and more complex,
perhaps because females in the north rely more strongly on song
when choosing a mate. But the forms of complexity differed
between west and east Siberia, because there are more ways to be
complex than simple.

"The greenish warbler is the first case in which we can see all
the steps that occurred in the behavioral divergence of two
species from their common ancestor. These results demonstrate how
small evolutionary changes can lead to the differences that cause
reproductive isolation between species, just as Darwin
envisioned."


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             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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