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Ecological speciation in Darwin’s finches: Ghosts of finches future

Jeffrey Podos, Katie M. Schroeder

2024Science13 citationsDOI

Abstract

The theory of ecological speciation posits that adaptive divergence among incipient species raises incidental barriers to reproduction, thus catalyzing the emergence of new species. In this study, we conducted an experimental test of this theory in Galápagos finches, a clade in which beaks and mating songs are mechanistically linked. We forecasted the acoustic structure of songs for a set of possible evolutionary futures (successive droughts spurring increasingly large beaks) and, in a field assay, presented resulting song simulations to territorial males. We found that responses to songs dropped off after six simulated drought events, to degrees roughly comparable to drops in response to songs that diverged through cultural drift and acoustic adaptation. Our results support, in Darwin's finches, the feasibility and mechanistic bases of an ecological speciation hypothesis.

Topics & Concepts

Genetic algorithmEcological speciationAdaptation (eye)BiologyDivergence (linguistics)EcologyDarwin (ADL)Reproductive isolationAdaptive radiationEvolutionary biologyPhylogenetic treePopulationGenetic variationNeuroscienceSystems engineeringPhilosophySociologyLinguisticsGeneEngineeringBiochemistryGene flowDemographyAnimal Behavior and ReproductionAnimal Vocal Communication and BehaviorPlant and animal studies
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