Space Travel News  
Do You Need Sex To Be A Species

Scanning electron micrographs showing morphological variation of bdelloid rotifers and their jaws. Have these asexual animals really diversified into evolutionary species? Credit: Image: Diego Fontaneto
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 20, 2007
If you own a birdbath, chances are you're hosting one of evolutionary biology's most puzzling enigmas: bdelloid rotifers. These microscopic invertebrates-widely distributed in mosses, creeks, ponds, and other freshwater repositories-abandoned sex perhaps 100 million years ago, yet have apparently diverged into nearly 400 species. Bdelloids have remained an enduring enigma in part because biologists are still debating whether the species actually exist as true evolutionary entities.

And if they do, what forces determine how they diverge? In the traditional view of species diversification, interbreeding promotes cohesion within a population-maintaining the species-and barriers to interbreeding (called reproduction isolation) promote species divergence.

With no interbreeding to maintain cohesion, the thinking goes, asexual taxa might not diversify into distinct species. In a new study published in PLoS Biology , Diego Fontaneto, Timothy Barraclough, and colleagues developed new statistical techniques for combined molecular and morphological analyses of rotifers to test the notion that species diversification requires sex.

The researchers show that, despite an ancient aversion for interbreeding, bdelloids display evolutionary patterns similar to those seen in sexually reproducing taxa. How they have avoided the pitfalls of a lifestyle widely regarded as evolutionary suicide remains an open question.

Fontaneto et al. predicted that if factors other than interbreeding, such as niche specialization, controlled species cohesion and divergence, then asexual taxa should diverge along the same lines as sexually reproducing organisms.

And if this were the case, they would expect to find genetic and morphological cohesion within independently evolving populations and divergence between them. To detect independently evolving populations, the researchers analyzed marker genes isolated from clones of bdelloids collected from diverse habitats around the world.

They constructed evolutionary trees using these and also did a morphological analysis where they measured the size and shape of the rotifers' jaws (called trophi). The morphological results largely fell in line with traditional taxonomic classifications for most bdelloid species. And species identified as related on the DNA trees typically had similar morphology.

The correspondence between the molecular and morphological results suggests that the majority of traditionally identified bdelloid species are what's known as monophyletic: individuals in the same species assort together on the evolutionary tree and share a common ancestor.

Using statistical models to determine the likely origin of the observed DNA tree branching patterns, the researchers show that these distinct monophyletic genetic clusters represent independently evolving entities (rather than variations within a single asexual population).

But what caused them to evolve independently? Are they geographically isolated populations that evolved under neutral selection, or did they evolve into ecologically discrete species as a result of divergent selection pressures on trophi morphology?

If bdelloids have experienced divergent selection, the researchers explain, they would expect to see high variation in trophi traits between species, and low intraspecies variation (compared to neutral changes). And that's what they found: bdelloids have experienced divergent selection on trophi size (and to a lesser degree, on trophi shape) at the species level.

Altogether, these results show that the asexual bdelloids have indeed experienced divergent selection on feeding morphology, most likely as they adapted to different food sources found in different niches. By showing that asexual organisms have diverged into "independently evolving and distinct entities," the researchers argue, t his study "refutes the idea that sex is necessary for diversification into evolutionary species."

They hope others use their approach to study mechanisms underlying species divergence in sexual taxa to clarify the hazy nature of species and biological diversity.

Citation: Fontaneto D, Herniou EA, Boschetti C, Caprioli M, Melone G, et al. (2007) Independently evolving species in asexual bdelloid rotifers. PLoS Biol 5(4): e87. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0050087.

Related Links
Imperial College London
Public Library of Science
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Medspiration Project Branches Out To Support Biodiversity
Paris, France (ESA) Mar 20, 2007
Maps of the sea surface temperature around Galapagos Islands and Cocos Island in the Pacific Ocean are being produced daily and are available online in full resolution in near-real time as part of the Medspiration project, an ESA-funded effort to represent the most reliable temperature of the seas on a global basis.







  • NASA Glenn To Test Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle
  • Jeff Ward To Head Up Avionics Guidance And Control At SpaceX
  • General Atomics Scores Power Production First
  • ISRO May Use Kerosene As Rocket Fuel

  • Next Ariane 5 Takes Shape
  • Official Opening Of The Soyuz Launch Base Construction Site In French Guiana
  • Canadian Satellite Given Final Checks At Russian Launch Pad
  • First Ariane 5 Launch Of 2007 Finally Gets Away

  • Shuttle ET Repairs Continue
  • Repairs Underway Of Hail Damaged Shuttle External Tank
  • Shuttle Back In Vehicle Assembly Building
  • Space Shuttle Atlantis Rolls Back

  • ISS Orbit Successful Changed Ahead Of Soyuz Docking
  • Nespoli Focuses On Complex Mission For ESA
  • ISS Orbit To Be Adjusted March 16
  • Station Crew Perform Experiments Related To Human Adaptation To Space

  • US-Russian Space Tensions Increase
  • NASA And Houston Technology Center Sign Space Act Agreement
  • Kirkland Travel Agency Owner Selected As Space Agent
  • Putting Out The Trash In Space

  • China Outlines Space Program Till 2010
  • China To Launch New Direct Broadcast Satellite To Replace SinoSat-2
  • Russian Court Upholds Custody For Space Firm Chief Reshetin
  • China Unveils New Space Science Plan

  • Students Rack Up Wins At Local Robotics Competition
  • Talking Bots
  • Novel Salamander Robot Crawls Its Way Up The Evolutionary Ladder
  • Look Ma, No Hands, No Humans

  • Express Logic Plays Key Role In Managing MRO Data From Red Planet
  • Opportunity Conducts Imaging And Diagnostics
  • Mars Express Radar Gauges Water Quantity Around Martian South Pole
  • NASA Mars Rover Churns Up Questions With Sulfur-Rich Soil

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement