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Anthropogenic Change and the Process of Speciation


Abstract Anthropogenic impacts on the environment alter speciation processes by affecting both geographical contexts and selection patterns on a worldwide scale. Here we review evidence of these effects. We find that human activities often generate spatial isolation between populations and thereby promote genetic divergence but also frequently cause sudden secondary contact and hybridization between diverging lineages. Human-caused environmental changes produce new ecological niches, altering selection in diverse ways that can drive diversification; but changes also often remove niches and cause extirpations. Human impacts that alter selection regimes are widespread and strong in magnitude, ranging from local changes in biotic and abiotic conditions to direct harvesting to global climate change. Altered selection, and evolutionary responses to it, impacts early-stage divergence of lineages, but does not necessarily lead toward speciation and persistence of separate species. Altogether, humans both promote and hinder speciation, although new species would form very slowly relative to anthropogenic hybridization, which can be nearly instantaneous. Speculating about the future of speciation, we highlight two key conclusions: (1) Humans will have a large influence on extinction and “despeciation” dynamics in the short term and on early-stage lineage divergence, and thus potentially speciation in the longer term, and (2) long-term monitoring combined with easily dated anthropogenic changes will improve our understanding of the processes of speciation. We can use this knowledge to preserve and restore ecosystems in ways that promote (re-)diversification, increasing future opportunities of speciation and enhancing biodiversity.
Authors Murielle Ålund ORCID , Meredith Cenzer ORCID , Nicolas Bierne ORCID , Janette W. Boughman ORCID , José Cerca ORCID , Mattheau S. Comerford ORCID , Alessandro Culicchi , R. Brian Langerhans ORCID , S. Eryn McFarlane University of WyomingORCID , Markus Moest ORCID , Henry L. North ORCID , Anna Qvarnström ORCID , Mark Ravinet ORCID , Richard Svanbäck ORCID , Scott A. Taylor ORCID
Journal Info Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press | Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology , vol: 15 , iss: 12 , pages: a041455 - a041455
Publication Date 10/3/2023
ISSN 1943-0264
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access closed Closed Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a041455
KeywordsKeyword Image Conservation Biology (Score: 0.55798) , Species Distribution Modeling (Score: 0.543124) , Species Richness (Score: 0.538726) , Habitat Fragmentation (Score: 0.535337) , Habitat Suitability (Score: 0.521029)