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Understanding Evolution

Understanding Evolution

Your one-stop source for information on evolution

Modes of speciation

HomeModes of speciation → Parapatric speciation

Parapatric speciation

Yellow field filled with beetles. Beetles at left are green. Beetles at right are purple. Intermediate shades are in between.In parapatric speciation there is no specific extrinsic barrier to gene flow. The population is continuous, but nonetheless, the population does not mate randomly. Individuals are more likely to mate with their geographic neighbors than with individuals in a different part of the population’s range. In this mode, divergence may happen because of reduced gene flow within the population and varying selection pressures across the population’s range.

grass with seed heads
Anthoxanthum odoratum photo © Erv Evans.

We may be observing the first steps of parapatric speciation in the grass speciesAnthoxanthum odoratum (at right). Some of these plants live near mines where the soil has become contaminated with heavy metals. The plants around the mines have experienced natural selection for genotypes that are tolerant of heavy metals. Meanwhile, neighboring plants that don’t live in polluted soil have not undergone selection for this trait. The two types of plants are close enough that tolerant and non-tolerant individuals could potentially fertilize each other — so they seem to meet the first requirement of parapatric speciation, that of a continuous population. However, the two types of plants have evolved different flowering times. This change could be the first step in cutting off gene flow entirely between the two groups.

Grass on uncontaminated soil does not have seed heads. Grass on contaminated soil does.
Although continuously distributed, different flowering times have begun to reduce gene flow between metal-tolerant plants and metal-intolerant plants.

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