Search: Look for:   Last 1 Month   Last 6 Months   All time

How new species emerge

Washington, Fri, 06 Feb 2009 ANI

Washington, Feb 6 (ANI): A new research paper has offered important insights into how new species come to be.

 

The paper has been authored by a team led by University of Notre Dame researchers Andrew Forbes, Thomas Powell, and Jeffrey Feder.

 

"This study is important because it shows how biodiversity itself can be a major generator of biodiversity," Feder said.

 

"As new species form, they can create new opportunities for others to take advantage of, which, in turn, can lead to a chain reaction of ever more new species," he added.

 

In the research paper, Forbes, Powell, Feder and colleagues demonstrate that the parasitic wasp Diachasma alloeum is evolving into a new incipient species as a result of specializing on the Rhagoletis fruit flies that they attack.

 

These Rhagoletis flies are themselves actively diversifying and forming new species. For the flies, the process begins with a shift to a new host plant.

 

Rhagoletis pomonella flies originally attacked the fruit of hawthorn trees. But about 150 years ago, a portion of the hawthorn fly population shifted and began to feed on apples.

 

In ecologically adapting to apples as a new host plant, apple flies are becoming genetically distinct and reproductively isolated from hawthorn flies.

 

The apple race of Rgagoletis flies is now a major pest of apples in the United States and is the proverbial "worm in the apple."

 

The Notre Dame researchers show that the Diachasma wasp that parasitizes Rhagoletis has also shifted to use the fly larvae that feed within the apple as a new food resource.

 

Indeed, the wasp has evolved many of the same types of ecological adaptations to live on flies in apples that the apple fly evolved before it.

 

In a plot twist, the apple wasp's ancestors appear to have come from a Rhagoletis fly infesting blueberries rather than hawthorns - one turn does not always lead directly to another.

 

"The idea that there are 'speciation cascades' operating in nature has important applications not only for understanding the process of speciation, but also for theories concerning how biodiversity reforms following mass extinction events, for why certain groups of organisms with certain lifestyles may be more diverse than others, and for why certain areas of biotic regions may have more life forms than others," Feder said. (ANI)

 


LATEST IMAGES
Manohar Lal being presented with a memento
Manoj Tiwari BJP Relief meets the family members of late Ankit Sharma
Haryana CM Manohar Lal congratulate former Deputy PM Lal Krishna Advani on his 92nd birthday
King of Bhutan, the Bhutan Queen and Crown Prince meeting the PM Modi
PM Narendra Modi welcomes the King of Bhutan
Post comments:
Your Name (*) :
Your Email :
Your Phone :
Your Comment (*):
  Reload Image
 
 

Comments:


 

OTHER TOP STORIES


Excellent Hair Fall Treatment
Careers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | About Us | Contact Us | | Latest News
Copyright © 2015 NEWS TRACK India All rights reserved.