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Sexual
Selection
by Mano Singham
In a previous article I discussed the fact
that although all of us have the identical set of ancestors who
lived
just 5,000 years ago, this does not mean that we have the same
genes. The fact that we are different is due to the fact that if
most of the mating occurs within a group, then this can result
in certain features becoming emphasized. In extreme case, this
initial isolated mating pattern can result in a new species being
formed that cannot mate with other groups that it could have done
in the past.
I had always thought that the two
organisms belonged to different species if they were biologically
different enough that they either
could not produce offspring or, as in the case of mules produced
by horses and donkeys, the offspring were infertile and thus
not able to reproduce.
But I learned from Richard
Dawkins' book The Ancestor's Tale (2004) that two things can be considered
different species even
if they
are perfectly capable of producing fertile offspring. All that
is required for them to be considered to be different species
is that they are not found to mate in the wild for whatever
reason.
Normally, this happens when there
is some kind of barrier that separates two groups of the same species
so that they cannot
mate. "No
longer able to interbreed, the two populations drift apart, or
are pushed apart by natural selection in different evolutionary
directions" (p. 339) and thus over time evolve into different
species. But the separation can also occur due to sexual selection.
He gives a fascinating example of
this on page 339. He describes experiments done with two species
of cichlid fish. The two
species live together in Lake Victoria in Africa and are
very similar,
except that one has a reddish color and the other bluish.
Under normal conditions, females choose males of the same
color.
In other words, there was no hybridization between the
two colors
in the
wild, thus meeting the requirements for being considered
different species. But when experimenters lit the fish
in artificial
monochromatic light so that they all looked dirty brown,
the females no longer
discriminated among the males and mated equally with both
kinds of males and the offspring of these hybrids were
fully fertile.
He also describes ring speciation using the example of the herring gull and lesser black-backed gull
(p. 302).
In Britain,
these
two kinds of birds don't hybridize even though they meet
and even breed
alongside one another in mixed colonies. Thus they are
considered different species.
But he goes on to say:
If you follow the population of
herring gulls westward to North America, then on around the world
across Siberia
and
back to
Europe again, you notice a curious fact. The 'herring
gulls', as you move
around the pole, gradually become less and less like
herring gulls and more and more like lesser black-backed
gulls,
until it turns
out that our Western European lesser black-backed
gulls actually are the other end of a ring-shaped continuum
which started
with herring gulls. At every stage around the ring,
the birds are
sufficiently similar to their immediate neighbors
in the ring to interbreed
with them. Until, that is, the ends of the continuum
are reached, and the ring bites itself in the tail.
The herring
gull and
the lesser black-backed gull in Europe never interbreed,
although they are linked by a continuous series of
interbreeding colleagues
all
the way around the other side of the world.
Dawkins gives a similar example
of this kind of ring speciation with salamanders in the Central
Valley
of California.
Why is this interesting? Because
it addresses a point that sometimes comes up with skeptics of
evolution.
They try
and argue that
there is a contradiction if we had evolved from
an ancestor species that
was so different from us that we could not interbreed
with that species. Surely, the argument goes,
doesn't speciation
imply
that if species A evolves into species B, then
must there be a time
when the child is of species B while the parent
is of species A. And isn't that a ridiculous
notion?
The herring gulls and salamanders
are the counterexamples in space (which we can directly see now)
of the
counterargument in time
(which we can only infer). What it says is
that as descendants are produced, they form a continuum
in
time. Each generation,
while differing slightly, can interbreed with
its previous generation, but over a long enough
period
of time,
the two end points of
the
time continuum need not be able to interbreed.
Thus it is possible for an organism
to be intermediate between two species.
Coming back to the question of why
we look so different if we all shared common ancestors
so
recently,
it is likely that the
kind
of selectivity practiced by the cichlid
fish has resulted in certain features being shared
by groups
that interbreed
within
a restricted
domain bounded by distance and geography
and culture, although the process has not
become
so extreme
that we have formed
into distinct species. Top of page
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