Sympatric Speciation and Disruptive Selection
May 13, 2024 | by Bloom Code Studio
- Sympatric speciation is believed to occur through disruptive selection. It is a controversial concept in evolutionary biology.
- Sympatric speciation is an uncommon process that stands out from other types of speciation.
- Sympatric speciation translates to “same place” in Greek and in this process an ancestral species undergoes a split into two or more reproductively isolated groups without geographic separation.
- According to sympatric speciation, the formation of a new species can occur without any physical barriers preventing members of a species from mating with one another, and all members are in close proximity.
- In sympatric speciation, a new species emerges based on a different food source or characteristic, without the need for geographic isolation. Over time, these differences in environmental dependency can lead to reproductive isolation.
- The crucial element of sympatric speciation is that it occurs when emerging species are in physical contact with each other, allowing them to interbreed and exchange genes.
- This concept challenges traditional ideas about the necessity of geographic isolation for speciation to occur.
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