Research news on Genetic Speciation

Genetic speciation is the biological process by which reproductive isolation between populations evolves primarily through genetic divergence, leading to the formation of distinct species. It involves the accumulation of heritable genetic differences via mutation, recombination, genetic drift, and natural or sexual selection, which alter allele frequencies and genomic architecture. These changes can generate prezygotic or postzygotic barriers, such as behavioral incompatibilities, hybrid sterility, or reduced hybrid viability. Genetic speciation may occur in various geographic contexts (allopatric, sympatric, parapatric) and is often associated with genomic features like chromosomal rearrangements, divergence in gene regulatory networks, and the fixation of Dobzhansky–Muller incompatibilities.

Ancient cave lion genomes reveal a distinct lineage

A new study on multiple genomes from the extinct cave lion has discovered that it represented a highly distinct evolutionary lineage, which separated from modern lions more than a million years ago. The results also show ...

Turning four into two: How duplicated genomes become diploid again

Genome duplication probably gave biodiversity a decisive evolutionary boost. A Chinese-German research team led by Axel Meyer from the University of Konstanz has now investigated the early phases of the process known as rediploidization. ...

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