On the origin of species by sympatric speciation
Authored by Ulf Dieckmann, Michael Doebeli
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.1038/22521
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Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
Understanding speciation is a fundamental biological problem. It is
believed that many species originated through allopatric divergence, where new species arise from geographically isolated populations of the
same ancestral species(1-3). In contrast, the possibility of sympatric
speciation (in which new species arise without geographical isolation)
has often been dismissed, partly because of theoretical
difficulties(2,3). Most previous models analysing sympatric speciation
concentrated on particular aspects of the problem while neglecting
others(4-10). Here we present a model that integrates a novel
combination of different features and show that sympatric speciation is
a likely outcome of competition for resources. We use multilocus
genetics to describe sexual reproduction in an individual-based model, and we consider the evolution of assortative mating (where individuals
mate preferentially with like individuals) depending either on an
ecological character affecting resource use or on a selectively neutral
marker trait. In both cases, evolution of assortative mating often leads
to reproductive isolation between ecologically diverging subpopulations.
When assortative mating depends on a marker trait, and is therefore not
directly linked to resource competition, speciation occurs when genetic
drift breaks the linkage equilibrium between the marker and the
ecological trait. Our theory conforms well with mounting empirical
evidence for the-sympatric origin of many species(10-18).
Tags
Dynamics
sexual selection
Model
Animals
Natural-selection
Adaptive radiation