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EARLY EARTH
Minute DNA change could lead to evolution
by Staff Writers
Cambridge, England (UPI) Aug 5, 2009


Research indicated the DNA change could lead to reproductive isolation and eventually speciation.

One tiny change in DNA could lead to the evolution of a new species, an English researcher reported.

A team lead by a University of Cambridge scientist explored this possibility when they studied two closely related flycatcher populations in the Solomon Islands, reporting their results in the American Naturalists.

The scientists said they studied two sub-species with the same body shape, but different colored bellies and distinct songs. Birds from these sub-species could mate, but sub-species' differences prevented them from recognizing each other as potential sexual partners.

Researchers said the ability to mate but the lack of recognition indicated the beginning of the evolution of new species. Other flycatchers in the Solomon Islands, east of Papua New Guinea, also differed in plumage color, but the genetic basis is not always as clear as a single DNA mutation, researchers said.

Rebecca Kilner of Britain's University of Cambridge said the study indicates how a single gene can cause color change in birds, affecting the selection of potential sexual partners.

Research indicated the DNA change could lead to reproductive isolation and eventually speciation, she said, but "in ways that are more complex than previously appreciated."

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Cabaneros National Park, Spain (AFP) Aug 3, 2009
Spanish researchers said Monday they have discovered evidence of a type of giant worm that lived 475 million years ago and was up to one metre (three feet) in length. The fossilised tracks of the marine worms were found in the Cabaneros National Park in central Spain in an area that was a seabed during the Lower Ordovician period, the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) said. ... read more


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