Arc-eyed Hawkfish, this one from Fiji in 2008.
Credit: NOAA photo by Julie Bedford
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If you isolate populations of animals and plants long
enough, they can evolve into different forms, even different species.
That's been known for a long time.
In the Hawaiian Islands, we also have lots of evidence that
the isolation doesn’t require long distances. A plant or insect in one steep-sided
valley can have evolved into a unique species from its relatives in the next
valley.
The valley itself may be sufficient to isolate the genetic
flow, and allow each group to evolve independently.
But can species isolate themselves without geographic
barriers? Apparently so, and you can find examples on Hawaiian reefs.
Researchers Jonathan Whitney, Brian Bowen and Stephen Karl,
all of the Hawai`i Institute of Marine Biology studied arc-eye hawkfish (Paracirrhites arcatus) off the Big
Island, where they found dark-colored fish on basalt bottoms and light-colored
fish in coral habitats—all within a few feet of each other.
And it turned out that the dark colored hawkfish were more
closely genetically related to dark hawkfish far away than they were to their
light-colored cousins nearby. The fish apparently were isolating themselves
voluntarily by their preferred habitat.
Whitney, Bowen and Karl published their research in the journal
Molecular Ecology, under the title,
"Flickers of speciation: Sympatric colour morphs of the arc-eye hawkfish, Paracirrhites arcatus, reveal key
elements of divergence with gene flow."
They wrote: "We observed greater genetic divergence
between colour morphs on the same reefs than that between the same morphs in
different geographic locations. We hypothesize that adaptation to the contrasting
microhabitats is overriding gene flow and is responsible for the partial reproductive
isolation observed between sympatric colour morphs."
Apparently, the light-colored fish on coral select their
mates from among the other light-colored fish on coral, rather than from among
the dark-colored fish on the basalt a short distance away. And vice versa.
"The combination of ecological, behavioural and now
genetic studies of the arc-eye hawkfish
provides compelling evidence for partial reproductive isolation resulting from
ecological barriers in the absence of geographic isolation."
The hawkfish have not been sufficiently isolated to have
developed into separate species, but they seem to be on their way in that
direction. And that's both interesting and strange, but may be a piece to a
puzzle, the authors write:
"Whether complete reproductive isolation will develop
between arc-eye colour morphs remains speculation. Regardless of the outcome, P. arcatus provides a rare case
confirming that partial reproductive isolation can evolve in the face of
continuous gene flow, bringing us one step closer to understanding the role
ecological barriers play in initiating the early stages of speciation."
©Jan TenBruggencate 2018
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