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
5526Warming lakes affecting fish behaviour in Northwestern Ontariotbnewswatch.com2019-04-01CA
5527Wow! Man hooks 50-pound fish in small lake 2019-02-25US
5528Fraser River sturgeon decline prompts fishing closuresCBC News2019-03-31CA
5529New study helps track 'destructive' giant goldfish threatening Hamilton HarbourCBC News2019-03-29CA
5530Free hunting and fishing in Saskatchewan for Canadian Armed Forces veteransGlobal News2019-03-29CA
5531Blue-green algae confirmed on Nepahwin Lake, Windy Lake: environment ministryCBC News2016-11-01CA
5532Scientists found microplastics inside creatures from the deepest parts of the ocean Business Insider Deutschland2019-03-26DE
5533Yellowknife's Rainbow Coalition fish camp welcoming place to learn art of the catchCBC News2019-03-24CA
5534This cuckoo catfish tricks other fish into raising its head-chomping youngScience2019-03-22 
5535Bad news for Canadian fish: Fewer people are catching themottawa citizen2019-03-19CA
5536Studies shed light on impact of virus on farmed Atlantic salmon in B.C.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-03-13CA
5537Scientific experts say fish virus poses low risk to Fraser River sockeyeThe Canadian Press2019-03-08CA
5538Study gives scientists unprecedented data on young Atlantic salmon in East Coast rivers The Canadian Press2019-03-15CA
5539Consistent fishing on Arrow LakesTrail Times2019-03-14CA
5540Province rolls out new fish and hunting licence systemCBC News2018-11-28CA
5541Why the Amazon River Can't Be Crossed By Bridgecntraveler2018-04-09BR
554223 Percent of Southern California Fish is Mislabeled 7SAN DIEGO2019-03-09US
5543Fishing for black crappie a Holland River shell gameYorkregion2019-03-11CA
5544A Look at the Rainbow Trout of KamloopsKamloops2019-03-01CA
5545Six new species of tentacle-faced fish discovered in AmazonThe Independent2019-03-07US
5546British mackerel has sustainable status stripped after years of overfishingindependent2019-03-06UK

218 219 220 221 of [221 - pages.]