Baker, R.
J. and R. D. Bradley. 2006. Speciation
in mammals and the Genetic Species Concept. Journal of Mammalogy
87(4):643-662.
Abstract: We
define a genetic species as a group of genetically compatible
interbreeding natural populations that is genetically isolated
from other such groups. This focus on genetic isolation rather
than reproductive isolation distinguishes the Genetic Species
Concept from the Biological Species Concept. Recognition of species
that are genetically isolated (but not reproductively isolated)
results in an enhanced understanding of biodiversity and the
nature of speciation as well as speciation-based issues and evolution
of mammals. We review criteria and methods for recognizing species
of mammals and explore a theoretical scenario, the Bateson1–Dobzhansky– Muller
(BDM) model, for understanding and predicting genetic diversity
and speciation in mammals. If the BDM model is operating in mammals,
then genetically defined phylogroups would be predicted to occur
within species defined by morphology, and phylogroups experiencing
stabilizing selection will evolve genetic isolation without concomitant
morphological diversification. Such species will be undetectable
using classical skin and skull morphology (Morphological Species
Concept). Using cytochrome-b data from sister species of mammals
recognized by classical morphological studies, we estimated the
number of phylogroups that exist within mammalian species and
hypothesize that there will be .2,000 currently unrecognized
species of mammals. Such an underestimation significantly affects
conclusions on the nature of speciation in mammals, barriers
associated with evolution of genetic isolation, estimates of
biodiversity, design of conservation initiatives, zoonoses, and
so on. A paradigm shift relative to this and other speciation-based
issues will be needed. Data that will be effective in detecting
these ‘‘morphologically cryptic genetic
species’’ are genetic, especially DNA-sequence data.
Application of the Genetic Species Concept uses genetic data from
mitochondrial and nuclear genomes to identify species and species
boundaries, the extent to which the integrity of the gene pool
is protected, nature of hybridization (if present), and introgression.
Genetic data are unique in understanding species because the use
of genetic data 1) can quantify genetic divergence from different
aspects of the genome (mitochondrial and nuclear genes, protein
coding genes, regulatory genes, mobile DNA, microsatellites, chromosomal
rearrangements, heterochromatin, etc.); 2) can provide divergence
values that increase with time, providing an estimate of time since
divergence; 3) can provide a population genetics perspective; 4)
is less subject to convergence and parallelism relative to other
sets of characters; 5) can identify monophyly, sister taxa, and
presence or absence of introgression; and 6) can accurately identify
hybrid individuals (kinship and source of hybrid individuals, F1s,
backcrosses, direction of hybridization, and in concert with other
data identify which hybrids are sterile or fertile). The proposed
definition of the Genetic Species Concept is more compatible with
a description of biodiversity of mammals than is ‘‘reproductively
isolated species.’’ Genetic profiles of mammalian species
will result in a genetic description of species and mammalian diversity,
and such studies are being accelerated by technological advances
that reduce cost and increase speed and efficiency of generating
genetic data. We propose that this genetic revolution remain museum-
and voucher specimen–based
and that new names are based on a holotype (including associated
tissues) deposited in an accredited museum.
Key words:
Bateson–Dobzhansky–Muller model, cryptic
species, cytochrome b, genetic isolation, Genetic Species Concept, hybrid
zones, phylogroups, reproductive isolation, speciation in mammals
1 BATESON,
W. 1909. Heredity
and variation in modern lights. Pp. 85– 101
in Darwin and modern science (A. C. Seward, ed.). Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom.