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
3676Scientists probe effects of unusual warming pattern in fish-rich Bering Seaadn2015-09-28RU
3677Salmon poachers thwarted by off-duty fish and wildlife officersCBC News2015-09-10CA
3678Environmentalists: GE miscounted PCBs in fishlohud2015-09-05CA
3679'Chaos' as P.E.I. boy, 10, hooks possible record-setting tunaCTVNews2015-04-26CA
3680Теория, практика и перспективы. Американские проекты погружающихся самолетовtopwar2021-06-25US
3681It's fishing rodeo season. Here's a look at Louisiana events for anglers of all agestheadvocate2021-06-05US
3682Amazing video shows captain landing 7ft fish while on tiny paddle boardmetro2015-07-30UK
3683River Tyne sees record sea trout and salmon numbersBBC News2015-08-16UK
3684This fish ‘snoozes’ for years without food or waterfuturity2015-08-10SG
3685Northland man lands giant tuna with his bare hands 2015-08-10NZ
3686Snakehead Fish Found In Upper Potomac River For First Timewamu2015-08-04US
3687NSU Researcher Discovers New Species Of Fishmiami.cbslocal2015-08-05US
3688We projected a fisheries collapse by 2048 — now there is reason for hopethehill2021-06-08CA
3689Lake Erie fish safe to eat despite harmful algal blooms, reports Division of Wildlife - Outdoors Notescleveland2015-07-30US
3690Great Lakes crustacean can survive being eaten by gobyrecord-eagle2015-07-22CA
3691Heat forces Oregon hatchery workers to truck salmon 100 milesoregonlive2015-07-21US
3692Loch Ness hunter: Have we been catfished by Nessie?wfla2015-07-17UK
3693Feds deny petition from environmentalists to ban cod fishingconcord monitor2015-07-16UK
3694Canada, Russia expected to unite for moratorium on High Arctic fishingthe globeand mail2015-07-15CA
3695Huge herring haul worries rival fishermen, environmentalists from Maine to N.J.NJ2015-07-12US
3696Обмеление Дона ведет к экологической катастрофе на Юге Россииtopcor2021-06-23RU
3697Сможет выполнять большой спектр задач»: как подводный беспилотник «Сарма» усилит гражданский флотАлександр Карпов, Алёна Медведева2021-06-23RU
3698Woman sues over getting stuck in fish trap while tubing in Sacramentomercurynews2021-06-08US
3699Fishmonger reveals man-sized fish recently caught in North SeaFox News2021-06-10US
3700N.J. fishing industry to get another $9.5M for COVID reliefNJ Advance Media for NJ.com 2021-06-09US

215 216 217 147 of [218 - pages.]