Study of 17,000 years of fish fossils reveals rapid evolution 
By Elizabeth Pennisi US Source: science 10/4/2023
Elizabeth Pennisi
Credit: Nare Ngoepe
When a new island or lake appears, the plants and animals that get there first have a leg up on later arrivals and are more likely to diversify into new species—or so evolutionary biologists have long assumed. But a study of fossils from East Africa’s Lake Victoria shows that it takes more than arriving early to win the speciation race. Although several kinds of fish colonized this lake around the same time, only cichlids took off, forming 500 species in less than 17,000 years, the team reports today in Nature.
 

“The paper uses a very smart [way] to find a clear answer to a longstanding question, which is why certain groups of organisms are more successful at forming many species over a short period of time,” says Claudius Kratochwil, an evolutionary developmental biologist at the University of Helsinki who was not involved with the work. The findings suggest opportunity and versatility matter more than primacy, adds George Turner, an evolutionary biologist and cichlid fish expert at Bangor University who was also not involved.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2626A digital insight into the benthic impact of salmon farmsThe Fish Site2022-08-08US
2627Dutch seaweed farmers boast first offshore mechanical harvestThe Fish Site2022-08-08US
2628Researchers turn fish scales into high-quality carbon nanomaterialThe Fish Site2022-08-04US
2629Fisheries official denies coverup allegations over research into endangered B.C. steelheadCBC News2022-08-05CA
2630Aquafeed prize saves 88 million fish and countingThe Fish Site2022-08-05US
2631Вести с водоемовОхотники.ру2022-08-06RU
2632A Race to Save Fish as Rio Grande Dries, Even in AlbuquerqueAssociated Press2022-08-03US
2633Strong sockeye salmon runs bode well for famed Fraser fisheryMSN2022-08-02CA
2634Canada spells out salmon transition planfishfarmermagazine2022-08-04CA
2635DFO restricts vehicle access to recreational area on Fraser River in effort to protect fish habitatMSN2022-07-29CA
2636$20,000 stingray for $2,500; arowanas as low as $100: Fish farm closes after 30 yearsasiaone2022-07-16SG
2637Bangkok aquarium shop hires bikini-clad women in fish tanks for grand openingmashable2022-07-22TH
2638The Bristol Bay sockeye run was record-settingadn2022-07-23US
2639Connecticut fisherman catches 26-pound tiger muskieFox News2022-08-04US
2640Deep Sea Fishing Rodeo sees record number of fish caughtwkrg2022-08-03US
2641Costa Rica Girlfriend Fishing Getawaysportfishingmag2022-07-14CR
2642When did the first fish live on Earth – and how do scientists figure out the timing?roanoke2022-07-18NZ
2643What is a ghost trap and why do they threaten marine life?wtsp2022-07-21US
2644Explosives smuggled from India used in blast fishing in Sri Lankamongabay2022-07-22IN
2645How a Tampa Bay couple is hooking Hispanics on kayak fishingtampabay2022-07-22US
2646Первая в жизни ловля сазанаОхотники.ру2022-08-03RU
2647Magnet fishing helps clean Maine waterswmtw2022-07-22RU
2648‘Fish guy’ turns his ‘awesome’ hobby into new businesstribtoday2022-07-16US
2649How Foreign Private Equity Hooked New England’s Fishing Industrypropublica2022-07-06DK
2650Missouri angler cited after posting photo of 'stringer full of fish'komu2022-07-11RU

215 216 217 105 of [218 - pages.]