Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Speciation and patterns of biodiversity
- 2 On the arbitrary identification of real species
- 3 The evolutionary nature of diversification in sexuals and asexuals
- 4 The poverty of the protists
- 5 Theory, community assembly, diversity and evolution in the microbial world
- 6 Limits to adaptation and patterns of biodiversity
- 7 Dynamic patterns of adaptive radiation: evolution of mating preferences
- 8 Niche dimensionality and ecological speciation
- 9 Progressive levels of trait divergence along a ‘speciation transect’ in the Lake Victoria cichlid fish Pundamilia
- 10 Rapid speciation, hybridization and adaptive radiation in the Heliconius melpomene group
- 11 Investigating ecological speciation
- 12 Biotic interactions and speciation in the tropics
- 13 Ecological influences on the temporal pattern of speciation
- 14 Speciation, extinction and diversity
- 15 Temporal patterns in diversification rates
- 16 Speciation and extinction in the fossil record of North American mammals
- Index
- Plate section
- References
8 - Niche dimensionality and ecological speciation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Speciation and patterns of biodiversity
- 2 On the arbitrary identification of real species
- 3 The evolutionary nature of diversification in sexuals and asexuals
- 4 The poverty of the protists
- 5 Theory, community assembly, diversity and evolution in the microbial world
- 6 Limits to adaptation and patterns of biodiversity
- 7 Dynamic patterns of adaptive radiation: evolution of mating preferences
- 8 Niche dimensionality and ecological speciation
- 9 Progressive levels of trait divergence along a ‘speciation transect’ in the Lake Victoria cichlid fish Pundamilia
- 10 Rapid speciation, hybridization and adaptive radiation in the Heliconius melpomene group
- 11 Investigating ecological speciation
- 12 Biotic interactions and speciation in the tropics
- 13 Ecological influences on the temporal pattern of speciation
- 14 Speciation, extinction and diversity
- 15 Temporal patterns in diversification rates
- 16 Speciation and extinction in the fossil record of North American mammals
- Index
- Plate section
- References
Summary
The ecological niche plays a central role in the process of ‘ecological speciation’, in which divergent selection between niches drives the evolution of reproductive isolation (Muller 1942; Mayr 1947, 1963; Schluter & Nagel 1995; Funk 1998; Schluter 2000). Ecological by-product speciation occurs because ecological traits that have diverged between populations via divergent selection, or traits that are genetically correlated with such traits, incidentally affect reproductive isolation. This process can occur under any geographic arrangement of populations (e.g. allopatry, parapatry or sympatry). A central prediction of ecological speciation is that ecologically divergent pairs of populations will exhibit greater levels of reproductive isolation than ecologically similar pairs of populations of similar age. Another prediction is that traits under divergent selection, or those genetically correlated with them, should often incidentally affect reproductive isolation (e.g. mate preference, hybrid fitness). In recent years, these predictions have been supported in a range of taxa (see Feder et al. 1994; Funk 1998; Via 1999; Rundle et al. 2000; Jiggins et al. 2001; Funk et al. 2002, 2006; Bradshaw & Schemske 2003; Rundle & Nosil 2005; and Funk, this volume, for review), and processes such as resource competition and predation are now known to be involved (Mallet & Barton 1989; Schluter 1994; Rundle et al. 2003; Vamosi 2005; Nosil & Crespi 2006a).
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- Information
- Speciation and Patterns of Diversity , pp. 127 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
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