Concepedia

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Speciation reversal and biodiversity dynamics with hybridization in changing environments

492

Citations

100

References

2007

Year

TLDR

Recent biodiversity largely arises from divergent adaptation in heterogeneous environments, yet the impact of losing such heterogeneity on genetic coexistence of sympatric species has been underexplored. Loss of heterogeneity relaxes divergent selection and removes ecological barriers to gene flow between divergently adapted species, promoting interspecific introgressive hybridization. Loss of environmental heterogeneity increases genetic admixture and reverses speciation, leading to biodiversity loss, and this process should be incorporated into conservation biology.

Abstract

Abstract A considerable fraction of the world's biodiversity is of recent evolutionary origin and has evolved as a by‐product of, and is maintained by, divergent adaptation in heterogeneous environments. Conservationists have paid attention to genetic homogenization caused by human‐induced translocations (e.g. biological invasions and stocking), and to the importance of environmental heterogeneity for the ecological coexistence of species. However, far less attention has been paid to the consequences of loss of environmental heterogeneity to the genetic coexistence of sympatric species. Our review of empirical observations and our theoretical considerations on the causes and consequences of interspecific hybridization suggest that a loss of environmental heterogeneity causes a loss of biodiversity through increased genetic admixture, effectively reversing speciation. Loss of heterogeneity relaxes divergent selection and removes ecological barriers to gene flow between divergently adapted species, promoting interspecific introgressive hybridization. Since heterogeneity of natural environments is rapidly deteriorating in most biomes, the evolutionary ecology of speciation reversal ought to be fully integrated into conservation biology.

References

YearCitations

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