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arxiv: 1111.4643 · v1 · pith:KSQGHK26new · submitted 2011-11-20 · 🧬 q-bio.PE · nlin.AO

The role of sex separation in neutral speciation

classification 🧬 q-bio.PE nlin.AO
keywords speciationpopulationshermaphroditicneutralspeciestopopatricabundanceabundant
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Neutral speciation mechanisms based on isolation by distance and sexual selection, termed topopatric, have recently been shown to describe the observed patterns of abundance distributions and species-area relationships. Previous works have considered this type of process only in the context of hermaphrodic populations. In this work we extend a hermaphroditic model of topopatric speciation to populations where individuals are explicitly separated into males and females. We show that for a particular carrying capacity speciation occurs under similar conditions, but the number of species generated decreases as compared to the hermaphroditic case. Evolution results in fewer species having more abundant populations.

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