Ring species
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In biology, ring species present an interesting problem for those who seek to divide the living world into discrete species.
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[edit] Explanation of the diagram
The coloured bar to the right shows a number of natural populations, each population represented by a different colour, varying along a cline (a gradual change in conditions which gives rise to slightly different characteristics predominating in the organisms that live along it). Interbreeding between two populations is shown by a grey zone. Such variation may occur in a straight line (for example, up a mountain slope) as is shown in A, or may bend right around (for example, around the shores of a lake), as is shown in B.
In the case where the cline bends around, populations next to each other on the cline can interbreed, but at the point that the beginning meets the end again, the genetic differences that have accumulated along the cline are great enough to prevent interbreeding (represented by the gap between pink and green on the diagram). The interbreeding populations in this circular breeding group are then collectively referred to as a ring species.
[edit] Problem of definition
The problem, then, is whether to quantify the whole ring as a single species (despite the fact that not all individuals can interbreed) or to classify each population as a distinct species (despite the fact that it can interbreed with its near neighbours). Ring species illustrate that the species concept is not as clear-cut as it is often understood to be.
[edit] Larus gulls
A classic example of ring species is the Larus gulls circumpolar species "ring". The range of these gulls forms a ring around the North Pole. The Herring Gull, which lives primarily in Great Britain, can hybridize with the American Herring Gull (living in North America), which can also interbreed with the Vega or East Siberian Herring Gull, the western subspecies of which, Birula's Gull, can hybridize with Heuglin's gull, which in turn can interbreed with the Siberian Lesser Black-backed Gull (all four of these live across the north of Siberia). The last is the eastern representative of the Lesser Black-backed Gulls back in north-western Europe, including Great Britain. However, the Lesser Black-backed Gulls and Herring Gull are sufficiently different that they cannot interbreed; thus the group of gulls forms a continuum except in Europe where the two lineages meet. A recent genetic study has shown that this example is far more complicated than presented here (Liebers et al, 2004).
[edit] Other examples
Other examples include:
- The Ensatina salamanders, which form a ring round the Central Valley in California
- The Greenish Warbler (Phylloscopus trochiloides), around the Himalayas (Alström 2006)
[edit] References
- Alström, Per (2006): Species concepts and their application: insights from the genera Seicercus and Phylloscopus. Acta Zoologica Sinica 52(Supplement): 429-434. PDF fulltext
- Liebers, Dorit; de Knijff, Peter & Helbig, Andreas J. (2004): The herring gull complex is not a ring species. Proc. Roy. Soc. B 271(1542): 893-901. DOI:10.1098/rspb.2004.2679 PDF fulltext Electronic Appendix
- Irwin, D.E., Irwin, J.H., and Price, T.D. (2001): "Ring species as bridges between microevolution and speciation." Genetica. 112-113: 223-243. PubMed
- Futuyma, D. (1998) Evolutionary Biology. Third edition. Sunderland, MA, Sinauer Associates.
- Moritz, C., C. J. Schneider, et al. (1982) "Evolutionary relationships within the Ensatina eschscholtzii complex confirm the ring species interpretation." Systematic Biology 41: 273-291.
[edit] External links
Speciation guide
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Basic concepts: species | chronospecies | speciation | cline |
Modes of speciation: allopatric | peripatric | parapatric | sympatric | polyploidy | paleopolyploidy |
Auxiliary mechanisms: sexual selection | assortative mating | punctuated equilibrium |
Intermediate stages: hybrid | Haldane's rule | ring species |