International Journal of Ecology (Jan 2012)

Parallel Ecological Speciation in Plants?

  • Katherine L. Ostevik,
  • Brook T. Moyers,
  • Gregory L. Owens,
  • Loren H. Rieseberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/939862
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012

Abstract

Read online

Populations that have independently evolved reproductive isolation from their ancestors while remaining reproductively cohesive have undergone parallel speciation. A specific type of parallel speciation, known as parallel ecological speciation, is one of several forms of evidence for ecology's role in speciation. In this paper we search the literature for candidate examples of parallel ecological speciation in plants. We use four explicit criteria (independence, isolation, compatibility, and selection) to judge the strength of evidence for each potential case. We find that evidence for parallel ecological speciation in plants is unexpectedly scarce, especially relative to the many well-characterized systems in animals. This does not imply that ecological speciation is uncommon in plants. It only implies that evidence from parallel ecological speciation is rare. Potential explanations for the lack of convincing examples include a lack of rigorous testing and the possibility that plants are less prone to parallel ecological speciation than animals.