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
1801Salmon Scotland announces final call for wild fisheries fundthefishsite2023-03-20UK
1802По чудесному льду...ohotniki2023-03-24RU
1803Minnesota catch-and-release northern pike recordechopress2023-03-14US
18041954 article puts then-lowly status of burbot on Lake of the Woods into clear focusechopress2023-03-25US
1805Summer 2022 creel survey shows decline in Red River fishing pressureechopress2023-03-25US
1806Much of drought-plagued West Coast faces salmon fishing banfoxnews2023-03-24US
1807Colorado fishermen ordered to pay over $1K each after catching 463 pounds of Michigan fishFox News2023-03-24US
1808A Fish Can Sense Another's Fear, a Study ShowsAssociated Press2023-03-23PT
1809На открытую воду в оттепельohotniki2023-03-23RU
1810Japan, 8 other economies agree to slash saury fishing quota by 25%Mainichi Japan2023-03-24JP
1811Much of drought-plagued U.S. West Coast faces salmon fishing banvancouversun2023-03-24US
1812Wisconsin man ties Minnesota catch-and-release northern pike recordechopress2023-03-14US
1813Expert on Minnesota lakes: Expect late ice-out this yearechopress2023-03-14US
1814Frisch: A One-Two Punch for Walleyesechopress2023-03-16US
1815Crappie resurgence offers bonus winter action on Upper Red Lakeechopress2023-03-17US
181630 invasive carp caught in Mississippi near Winonaechopress2023-03-23US
1817Fort Myers Beach removes 10 tons of dead fish from beachesFort Myers News-Press2023-03-07US
1818Spearfisherman snags 177-pound monster, then has to get it out of ice-covered lakethestate2023-02-15US
1819Angler reels in record-breaking fish — and she’s just 5 years old, Idaho officials saythestate2023-03-08US
1820Nigeria's cage-based tilapia championthefishsite2023-03-08NG
1821One of North America’s most dangerous invasive species is hitchhiking on fishscience2023-03-10US
1822Anglerfish, the amazing sexual parasites of the abysselpais2023-03-07IS
1823Plastic pollution is filtering up into the fish that we eatsalon2023-03-08US
1824Federal infrastructure funds could be a boon for fish passagesouthernmarylandchronicle2023-03-11US
1825British angler hooks humongous 222lb catfish which dragged his boatdailymail2023-03-10UK

215 216 217 72 of [218 - pages.]