Hybridization, Introgression, and the Nature of Species Boundaries
Cornell University · University of Montana
Abstract
Species can be defined as populations that are diagnosably distinct, reproductively isolated, cohesive, or exclusive groups of organisms. Boundaries between species in sympatry are maintained by intrinsic barriers to gene exchange; these boundaries may not be uniform in space, in time, or across the genome. Here, we explore the nature of the species boundary, defined as the phenotypes/genes/genome regions that remain differentiated in the face of potential hybridization and introgression. We emphasize that species boundaries are semipermeable, with permeability (gene exchange) being a function of genome region. The early evidence for semipermeable species boundaries came from data on differential introgression…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 169
Authors
2- RGRichard G HarrisonCorresponding
Cornell University
- ELErica L. Larson
Cornell University, University of Montana
Topics & keywords
- Introgression
- Biology
- Reproductive isolation
- Genome
- Evolutionary biology
- Sympatry
- Genetic algorithm
- Gene flow
- Life in Land