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        <dc:title>What role does natural selection play in speciation?</dc:title>
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                <foaf:name></foaf:name>
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        <bibo:abstract>If distinct biological species are to coexist in sympatry, they must be reproductively isolated and must exploit different limiting resources. A two-niche Levene model is analysed, in which habitat preference and survival depend on underlying additive traits. The population genetics of preference and viability are equivalent. However, there is a linear trade-off between the chances of settling in either niche, whereas viabilities may be constrained arbitrarily. With a convex trade-off, a sexual population evolves a single generalist genotype, whereas with a concave trade-off, disruptive selection favours maximal variance. A pure habitat preference evolves to global linkage equilibrium if mating occurs in a single pool, but remarkably, evolves to pairwise linkage equilibrium within niches if mating is within those niches--independent of the genetics. With a concave trade-off, the population shifts sharply between a unimodal distribution with high gene flow and a bimodal distribution with strong isolation, as the underlying genetic variance increases. However, these alternative states are only simultaneously stable for a narrow parameter range. A sharp threshold is only seen if survival in the &apos;wrong&apos; niche is low; otherwise, strong isolation is impossible. Gene flow from divergent demes makes speciation much easier in parapatry than in sympatry.</bibo:abstract>
        <bibo:volume>365</bibo:volume>
        <bibo:issue>1547</bibo:issue>
        <bibo:startPage>1825 - 1840</bibo:startPage>
        <bibo:endPage>1825 - 1840</bibo:endPage>
        <dc:publisher>Royal Society</dc:publisher>
        <bibo:doi rdf:resource="10.1098/rstb.2010.0001" />
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