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BIODIVERSITY RETHINK
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
SAN
FRANCISCO, Ca. (June 19, 1997)- Transitional zones along the edge of
the rain forest may play a key role in conservation of these endangered
resources, report researchers from San Francisco State University.
The researchers are challenging mainstream theories on how rain forest
biodiversity is generated, and suggest the key to conservation may
lie in protecting overlooked transitional zones along the forest periphery
known as ecotones.
Caption: Evolutionary
biologist Thomas B. Smith at the research site in Cameroon.
"Ecotones are dynamic environments that have typically been overlooked.
The general belief is that if we preserve rain forests we're also preserving
the processes that create biodiversity. But our findings suggest that the
engines generating new species and increased biodiversity may lie
in the unprotected ecotones at the forest periphery, " reports Thomas B.
Smith an evolutionary biologist at SFSU.
Smith was a member of an international team that conducted a 6-year-long
study of West African rain forests and ecotones. The researchers used molecular
genetic techniques to examine the DNA of 12 populations of the little greenbul
(Andropadus virens), a common West African bird species that inhabits both
rain forests and adjacent ecotones. By measuring their distinct physical
characteristics, the team uncovered evidence linking ecotones with speciation.
"The findings are significant because they contrast with past theories
of rain forest speciation which attribute the
evolution to new species to geographic isolation, to the dynamics within
the forest during glacial periods," says
Smith. "Although much more work is needed, our results suggest that,
instead, ecotones may be vital to the production and maintenance of biodiversity
in tropical rain forests by creating new species through the process of
natural selection."
The team compared birds from the forest and ecotone sites. Using mist
nets to trap them, they drew blood for genetic analysis and measured five
physical characteristics--weight, bill depth, and wing, tarsus and
upper mandible length.
Smith found that although the ecotone populations were significantly
different physically from their rain forest
counterparts, there was considerable gene flow between them. Smith
says this means that differences in natural
selection may drive populations apart, despite gene flow.
"If new species are formed this way," reports Smith in Science, "they
may move from their ecotone cradle to the forest and contribute to the
biodiversity. If the work is confirmed by other studies, it may reinforce
an idea that many biologists have suggested in the past, that rain forests
are sinks for new species, rather than areas where new species are generated."
Rain forests contain 50 percent of the world's species, yet constitute
only 7 percent of the earth's land mass. As forests shrink, says Smith,
ecotones are some of the first habitats to disappear as a result of burning,
wood gathering and grazing.
"If further research supports the role of ecotones as centers for speciation,
they will need to be preserved," he
says. "If we lose these habitats, we may be losing the processes that
generate biodiversity."
In an accompanying Science news article, evolutionary biologist John
Endler, who in 1977 was the first to suggest that natural selection may
overcome gene flow, says Smith's work is "a major first step" in supporting
the long-held hypothesis that natural selection not only shapes the physical
appearance of all living organisms, but also may be important to the formation
of new species.
The research appears in the June 20, 1997 issue of Science.
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