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Galapagos finches caught in act of becoming new species

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A population of finches on the Galapagos has been discovered in the process of becoming a new species.

This is the first example of speciation that scientists have been able to observe directly in the field, bbc.co.uk reported.

Researcher­s followed the entire population of finches on a tiny Galapagos island called Daphne Major, for many years, and so they were able to watch the speciation in progress.

The research was published in the journal Science.

The group of finch species to which the Big Bird population belongs are collective­ly known as Darwin’s finches and helped Charles Darwin to uncover the process of evolution by natural selection.

In 1981, the researcher­s noticed the arrival of a male of a non-native species, the large cactus finch.

Professors Rosemary and Peter Grant noticed that this male proceeded to mate with a female of one of the local species, a medium ground finch, producing fertile young.

Almost 40 years later, the progeny of that original mating are still being observed, and number around 30 individual­s.

Professor Roger Butlin, a speciation expert who wasn’t involved in the study, said, “It’s an extreme case of something we’re coming to realize more generally over the years. Evolution in general can happen very quickly.”

What makes a species?

This new finch population is sufficient­ly different in form and habits to the native birds, as to be marked out as a new species, and individual­s from the different population­s don’t interbreed.

Butlin said that people working on speciation credit the Grant professors with altering our understand­ing of rapid evolutiona­ry change in the field.

In the past, it was thought that two different species must be unable to produce fertile offspring in order to be defined as such. But in more recent years, it has been establishe­d that many birds and other animals that we consider to be unique species are in fact able to interbreed with others to produce fertile young.

Butlin added, “We tend not to argue about what defines a species anymore, because that doesn’t get you anywhere.”

What he said is more interestin­g is understand­ing the role that hybridizat­ion can have in the process of creating new species, which is why this observatio­n of Galapagos finches is so important.

The researcher­s think that the original male must have flown 65 miles (104km) from the large cactus finches’ home island of Española.

That’s a very long way for a small finch to fly, and so it would be very unlikely for the bird to make a successful return flight.

By identifyin­g one way that new species can arise, and following the entire population, the researcher­s state this as an example of speciation occurring in a timescale we can observe.

In most cases, the offspring of crossspeci­es mattings are poorly adapted to their environmen­t. But in this instance, the new finches on Daphne Major are larger than other species on the island, and have taken hold of new and unexploite­d food.

For this reason, the researcher­s are calling the animals the ‘Big Bird population’.

To scientific­ally test whether the Big Bird population was geneticall­y distinct from the three species of finch native to the island, Peter and Rosemary Grant collaborat­ed with Professor Leif Andersson of Sweden’s Uppsala University who analyzed the population geneticall­y for the new study. Andersson said, “The surprise was that we would expect the hybrid would start to breed with one of the other species on the island and be absorbed… we have confirmed that they are a closed breeding group.”

Due to an inability to recognize the songs of the new males, native females won’t pair with this new species.

And in this paper, new genetic evidence shows that after two generation­s, there was complete reproducti­ve isolation from the native birds.

As a result, they are now reproducti­vely — and geneticall­y — isolated. So they have been breeding exclusivel­y with each other over the years.

Andersson said, “What we are saying is that this group of birds behave as a distinct species.

“If you didn’t know anything about [Daphne Major’s] history and a taxonomist arrived on this island they would say there are four species on this island.”

There is no evidence that they will breed again with the native medium ground finch, but even if they did, they now have a larger size and can exploit new opportunit­ies. Those advantageo­us traits may be maintained by natural selection.

So hybridizat­ion can lead to speciation, simply through the addition of one individual to a population. It may therefore be a way for new traits to evolve quickly.

Butlin said, “If you just wait for mutations causing one change at a time, then it would make it more difficult to raise a new species that way. But hybridizat­ion may be more effective than mutation.”

 ??  ?? bbc.co.uk This is an image of the Big Bird lineage, which arose through the breeding of two distinct parent species.
bbc.co.uk This is an image of the Big Bird lineage, which arose through the breeding of two distinct parent species.

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