4.4 Article

Hybridization and the Coexistence of Species

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Review Ecology

On the Origin of Coexisting Species

Rachel M. Germain et al.

Summary: Speciation often begins but rarely completes, possibly due to the failure of nascent lineages to persist. Key gaps between ecological and evolutionary theories exist, and bridging these gaps can help clarify the success or failure of speciation. The application of ecological coexistence theory can aid in understanding the initiation, progression, and completion of speciation, and contribute to unifying the origin and maintenance of species diversity across the tree of life.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2021)

Review Ecology

When Ecology Fails: How Reproductive Interactions Promote Species Coexistence

Miguel Gomez-Llano et al.

Summary: Recent research has shown that ecologically equivalent species can coexist under the regulation of reproductive interactions and sexual selection. Reproductive interactions play a significant role in maintaining species diversity, as highlighted by theoretical models and empirical studies. This neglected pathway towards explaining species diversity offers new insights and future research directions within the conceptual framework of coexistence theory.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2021)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Ongoing production of low-fitness hybrids limits range overlap between divergent cryptic species

Else K. Mikkelsen et al.

Summary: Contact zones between the Pacific wren and winter wren, two morphologically similar songbirds in western Canada, show high genetic differentiation, moderate hybridization rate, and low fitness of F-1 hybrids, resulting in a population sink and narrow overlap of the two species. This dynamic may explain the frequent narrow range overlap observed between closely related species.

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY (2021)

Article Evolutionary Biology

Genomic identification of intergeneric hybrids in New World wood-warblers (Aves: Parulidae)

David P. L. Toews et al.

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY (2020)

Article Biology

Morphologically cryptic Amazonian bird species pairs exhibit strong postzygotic reproductive isolation

Paola Pulido-Santacruz et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2018)

Review Multidisciplinary Sciences

Speciation gradients and the distribution of biodiversity

Dolph Schluter et al.

NATURE (2017)

Article Biology

Co-occurrence of related asexual, but not sexual, lineages suggests that reproductive interference limits coexistence

Jeannette Whitton et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2017)

Article Mathematics, Applied

Julia: A Fresh Approach to Numerical Computing

Jeff Bezanson et al.

SIAM REVIEW (2017)

Article Biology

Species coexistence: macroevolutionary relationships and the contingency of historical interactions

Rachel M. Germain et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2016)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Niche filling slows the diversification of Himalayan songbirds

Trevor D. Price et al.

NATURE (2014)

Review Ecology

Rethinking Community Assembly through the Lens of Coexistence Theory

J. HilleRisLambers et al.

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION, AND SYSTEMATICS, VOL 43 (2012)

Article Genetics & Heredity

Genetic Drift Widens the Expected Cline but Narrows the Expected Cline Width

Jitka Polechova et al.

GENETICS (2011)

Article Ecology

A model for the evolution of assortative mating

M. A. R. De Cara et al.

AMERICAN NATURALIST (2008)

Article Ecology

An analytically tractable model for competitive speciation

Pleuni S. Pennings et al.

AMERICAN NATURALIST (2008)

Article Genetics & Heredity

Frequency-dependent selection and the evolution of assortative mating

Sarah P. Otto et al.

GENETICS (2008)

Review Ecology

Hybridization as an invasion of the genome

J Mallet

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2005)

Review Ecology

Theory and speciation

M Turelli et al.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2001)

Review Ecology

Sexual selection and speciation

TM Panhuis et al.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2001)

Article Ecology

Detecting the geographical pattern of speciation from species-level phylogenies

TG Barraclough et al.

AMERICAN NATURALIST (2000)

Article Ecology

Spatial models for hybrid zones

R Durrett et al.

HEREDITY (2000)