4.2 Article

Speciation in marine environments: Diving under the surface

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 4-15

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13756

Keywords

demographic history; dispersal; effective population size; gene flow; genomic architecture; geographic isolation; hybridization; interdisciplinary research; natural selection; reproductive barriers

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/P001610/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Our understanding of speciation in marine environments is limited compared to terrestrial and freshwater environments, but recent technological advances are making it increasingly possible to study a wider range of taxa and ecosystems. By focusing on studying marine evolutionary processes, reproductive barriers, genomic architectures, evolutionary history, patterns of hybridization, and implementing interdisciplinary research programs, we hope to deepen our understanding of speciation in the marine realm.
Marine environments are inhabited by a broad representation of the tree of life, yet our understanding of speciation in marine ecosystems is extremely limited compared with terrestrial and freshwater environments. Developing a more comprehensive picture of speciation in marine environments requires that we 'dive under the surface' by studying a wider range of taxa and ecosystems is necessary for a more comprehensive picture of speciation. Although studying marine evolutionary processes is often challenging, recent technological advances in different fields, from maritime engineering to genomics, are making it increasingly possible to study speciation of marine life forms across diverse ecosystems and taxa. Motivated by recent research in the field, including the 14 contributions in this issue, we highlight and discuss six axes of research that we think will deepen our understanding of speciation in the marine realm: (a) study a broader range of marine environments and organisms; (b) identify the reproductive barriers driving speciation between marine taxa; (c) understand the role of different genomic architectures underlying reproductive isolation; (d) infer the evolutionary history of divergence using model-based approaches; (e) study patterns of hybridization and introgression between marine taxa; and (f) implement highly interdisciplinary, collaborative research programmes. In outlining these goals, we hope to inspire researchers to continue filling this critical knowledge gap surrounding the origins of marine biodiversity.

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