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Author Topic:   How many generations does speciation take?
Wounded King
Member
Posts: 4149
From: Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Joined: 04-09-2003


Message 41 of 52 (189876)
03-03-2005 6:20 PM
Reply to: Message 16 by pink sasquatch
03-03-2005 2:59 PM


Re: hormonal butterflies
Another example of premating isolation as the result of a single mutation was witnessed by researchers in a population of snails - snails with the mutation had the opposite shell chirality of the snails without, and their genitals couldn't line up for mating.
This still isn't right Pink. The offspring of homozygous mothers with the mutation have the sinistral chirality, not those who are themselves homozygous.
TTFN,
WK

This message is a reply to:
 Message 16 by pink sasquatch, posted 03-03-2005 2:59 PM pink sasquatch has replied

Replies to this message:
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Wounded King
Member
Posts: 4149
From: Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Joined: 04-09-2003


Message 43 of 52 (189880)
03-03-2005 6:28 PM


Snail Models
In relation to the snail chirality issue there is a paper, pre-dating the Nature paper Pink referenced, Which discusses a computer model used to investigate rates of speciation based on 'delayed prezygotic' isolation.
Delayed prezygotic isolating mechanisms: evolution with a twist
J. Stone and M. Bjrklund
Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B (2002),Volume 269, Number 1493, pp.861 - 865
Assortative mating characterizes the situation wherein reproducing individuals pair according to similarity. Usually, the impetus for this bias is attributed to some type of mate choice conferring benefits (e.g., increased fitness or genetic compatibility) and, thereby, promoting speciation and phenotypic evolution. We investigate, by computer simulation of an evolving deme-structured snail population, the ramifications ensuing from passive assortative mating wherein couples exhibiting opposite shell coil direction phenotypes experience a physical constraint on mating success: putative mating partners inhabiting stout dextral and sinistral shells are unable to exchange sperm. Because shell coil chirality genotype is encoded at a single locus by shell coil alleles that are inherited maternally, snails containing sinistral alleles can present the typical dextral phenotype. Consequently, the incidence of a sinistral allele in as few as one snail can be manifested as prezygotic reproductive isolation within a deme in a subsequent generation. However, because the efficacy of achieving this type of prezygotic reproductive isolation is affected by shell form, the likelihood and product of single-gene speciation should be determined by deme interaction (migration) and composition (morphological distribution). We test this hypothesis and show how stochastic migration interacts with passive assortative mating yielding morphologically induced prezygotic reproductive isolation to produce new species phenotypes. The results show that demes can achieve rapid macroscopic phenotypic transformation and indicate that sympatric speciation might be more plausible than naturalists recognize conventionally.
TTFN,
WK

  
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