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Geometry of sex: How body size could lead to new species
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Geometry of Sex: How Body Size Could Lead to New Species

ScienceDaily (Aug. 28, 2011) — Different species of scincid lizards, commonly known as skinks, rarely interbreed, but it's not for lack of trying. According to Jonathan Richmond, a researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey, different species of skinks in western North America will often try to mate with each other when given the opportunity, but mechanical difficulties caused by differing body sizes can cause these encounters to fail.

After observing hundreds of cross-species mating attempts in the lab, Richmond and his colleagues developed a computational model showing how size differences create reproductive barriers between skink species. In order to align their genitals for successful insemination, the male must corkscrew his body around the female. Once the sizes of the male and female diverge outside the threshold of the researchers' model, successful mating was very rare. The model elucidates the role body size plays in splitting skinks into separate species. For skinks, it apparently isn't behavioral preference that prevents gene flow between species. It's the mechanics of body size.

"As size diverges, the corkscrew fails," Richmond said. "In this case, it just happens that this is about the only thing necessary to get the ball rolling for speciation."

The research appears in the September 2011 issue of the The American Naturalist, published by The University of Chicago Press for The American Society of Naturalists.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Chicago Press Journals, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Jonathan Q. Richmond, Elizabeth L. Jockusch, Andrew M. Latimer. Mechanical Reproductive Isolation Facilitates Parallel Speciation in Western North American Scincid Lizards. The American Naturalist, 2011; 178 (3): 320 DOI: 10.1086/661240
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Quicklinks:
- 200811081110223331- 200709070919115950- Why Are Some Groups Of Animals So Diverse?- read more- 201204120430101021- Twenty-Four New Species of Lizards Discovered On Caribbean Islands Are Close to Extinction- read more- 201009100901132203- Getting a Tail Up On Conservation? New Method for Measuring Lizard Weight from Size- read more- Morphing Robots and Shape-Shifting Sculptures- Fungicide Affects Behavior For Generations- What Baboons Can Teach Us About Social Status- Jurassic Squid Ink Same as Today's Squid Ink- DNA Used for Rewritable Digital Data Storage- 'Empathy' Neurons in Monkey Brains?- Cloak of Invisibility Using Plasmonics- Earth's Water Cycle Intensifying- Limb Loss In Lizards: Evidence For Rapid Evolution- 200709070919115950- Why Are Some Groups Of Animals So Diverse?- read more- 201204120430101021- Twenty-Four New Species of Lizards Discovered On Caribbean Islands Are Close to Extinction- read more- 201009100901132203- Getting a Tail Up On Conservation? New Method for Measuring Lizard Weight from Size- read more- Morphing Robots and Shape-Shifting Sculptures- Fungicide Affects Behavior For Generations- What Baboons Can Teach Us About Social Status- Jurassic Squid Ink Same as Today's Squid Ink- DNA Used for Rewritable Digital Data Storage- 'Empathy' Neurons in Monkey Brains?- Cloak of Invisibility Using Plasmonics- Earth's Water Cycle Intensifying- read more- 200709070919115950- Why Are Some Groups Of Animals So Diverse?- read more- 201204120430101021- Twenty-Four New Species of Lizards Discovered On Caribbean Islands Are Close to Extinction- read more- 201009100901132203- Getting a Tail Up On Conservation? New Method for Measuring Lizard Weight from Size- read more- Morphing Robots and Shape-Shifting Sculptures- Fungicide Affects Behavior For Generations- What Baboons Can Teach Us About Social Status- Jurassic Squid Ink Same as Today's Squid Ink- DNA Used for Rewritable Digital Data Storage- 'Empathy' Neurons in Monkey Brains?- Cloak of Invisibility Using Plasmonics- Earth's Water Cycle Intensifying