AAAS Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion

AAAS Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion
http://www.aaas.org//spp/dser/03_Areas/evolution/perspectives/Mayr_1996_june.shtml
Thematic Areas: Evolution: Perspectives
What is a Species, and What is Not?
ERNST MAYR
REPUBLISHED WITH KIND PERMISSION FROM DR. MAYR: MAYR, ERNST. "WHAT IS A SPECIES AND WHAT IS NOT?," PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, VOL. 63 (JUNE 1996) PP. 262-277.
I analyze a number of widespread misconceptions concerning species. the species category, defined by a concept, denotes the rank of a species taxon in the linnaean hierarchy. biological species are reproducing isolated from each other, which protects the integrity of their genotypes. degree of morphological difference is not an appropriate species definition. unequal rates of evolution of different characters and lack of information on the mating potential of isolated populations are the major difficulties in the demarcation of species taxa.
1. What is a species, and what is not? As someone who has published
books and papers on the biological species for more than 50 years, and
who has revised and studied in detail more than 500 species of birds and
many species of other groups of organisms, the reading of some recent
papers on species has been a rather troubling experience. there is only
one term that fits some of these authors: armchair taxonomists. since
many authors have never personally analyzed any species populations or
studied species in nature, they lack any feeling for what species actually
are. darwin already knew this when, in september 1845, he wrote to joseph
hooker: "how painfully true is your remark that no one has hardly
the right to examine the question of species who has not minutely described
many" (darwin 1987, 253). these authors make a number of mistakes
that have been pointed out again and again in the recent literature. admittedly,
the relevant literature is quite scattered, and some of it is perhaps
rather inaccessible to a non-taxonomist. yet, because the species concept
is an important concept in the philosophy of science, every effort should
be made to clarify it. it occurred to me that instead of criticizing certain
recently published papers individually, it would be more constructive
and helpful if i would here attempt to present, from the perspective of
a practicing systematist, a concise overview of the philosophically important
aspects of the problem of the 'species'. there is nothing of the sort
in the literature.
The species is the principal unit of evolution and it is impossible
to write about evolution, and indeed about almost any aspect of the philosophy
of biology, without having a sound understanding of the meaning of biological
species. A study of the history of the species problem helps to dispel
some of the misconceptions (Mayr 1957, Grant 1994).
2. Species of organisms are concrete phenomena of nature. Some
recent authors have dealt with the concept of species as if it were merely
an arbitrary, man-made concept, like the concepts of reduction, demarcation,
cause, derivation, prediction, progress, each of which may have almost
as many definitions as there are authors who have written about them.
however, the concept biological species is not like such concepts. the
term 'species' refers to a concrete phenomenon of nature and this fact
severely constrains the number and kinds of possible definitions. the
word 'species' is, like the words 'planet' or 'moon,' a technical term
for a concrete phenomenon. one cannot propose a new definition of a planet
as "a satellite of a sun that has its own satellite," because
this would exclude venus, and some other planets without moons. a definition
of any class of objects must be applicable to any member of this class
and exclude reference to attributes not characteristic of this class.
this is why any definition of the term 'species' must be based on careful
study of the phenomenon of nature to which this term is applied. alas,
this necessity is not appreciated by all too many of those who have recently
discussed the species problem after a mere analysis of the literature.
The conclusion that there are concrete describable objects in nature
which deserve to be called "species" is not unanimously accepted.
There has been a widespread view that species are only arbitrary artifacts
of the human mind, as some nominalists, in particular, have claimed. Their
arguments were criticized by Mayr (1949a, 371).
3. Why are there species of organisms? Why is the total genetic
variability of nature organized in the form of discrete packages, called
species? why are there species in nature? what is their significance?
the darwinian always asks why questions because he knows that everything
in living nature is the product of evolution and must have had some selective
significance in order to have evolved. (1)
He therefore asks: What selection forces in nature favor the origin and
maintenance of species? The answer to this question becomes evident when
one makes a certain thought experiment.
"It is quite possible to think of a world in which species do not
exist but are replaced by a single reproductive community of individuals,
each one different from every other one, and each one capable of reproducing
with those other individuals that are most similar to it. Each individual
would then be the center of a concentric series of circles of genetically
more and more unlike individuals. What would be the consequence of the
continuous uninterrupted gene flow through such a large system? In each
generation certain individuals would have a selective advantage because
they have a gene complex that is specially adapted to a particular ecological
situation. However, most of these favorable combinations would be broken
up by pairing with individuals with a gene complex adapted to a slightly
different environment. In such a system there is no defense against the
destruction of superior gene combinations except the abandonment of sexual
reproduction. It is obvious that any system that prevents such unrestricted
outcrossing is superior'' (2)
(mayr 1949b, 282). the biological species is such a system.
The biological meaning of species is thus quite apparent: "The
segregation of the total genetic variability of nature into discrete packages,
so called species, which are separated from each other by reproductive
barriers, prevents the production of too great a number of disharmonious
incompatible gene combinations. This is the basic biological meaning of
species and this is the reason why there are discontinuities between sympatric
species. We do know that genotypes are extremely complex epigenetic systems.
There are severe limits to the amount of genetic variability that can be
accommodated in a single gene pool without producing too many incompatible
gene combinations" (Mayr 1969, 316). The validity of this argument
is substantiated by the fact that hybrids between species, particularly
in animals, are almost always of inferior viability and more extreme hybrids
are usually even sterile. "Almost always" means that there are
species interpreted to be the result of hybridization, particularly among
plants, but except for the special case of allopolyploidy, such cases are
rare.
Among the attributes members of a species share, the only ones that
are of crucial significance for the species definition are those which
serve the biological purpose of the species, that is, the protection of
a harmonious gene pool. These attributes were named by Dobzhansky (1935)
isolating mechanisms. It is immaterial whether or not the term isolating
mechanism was well chosen, nor is it important whether one places the stress
on the prevention of interbreeding with non-conspecific individuals or
the facilitation ("recognition") of breeding with conspecific
individuals. The concept I have just developed is articulated in the so-called
biological species definition: "Species are groups of interbreeding
natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups."
The isolating mechanism by which reproductive isolation is effected are
properties of individuals. Geographic isolation therefore does not qualify
as an isolating mechanism.
Reproductive Isolation. The Biological Species definition includes
the statement that the populations of one species are "reproductively
isolated" from the populations of all other species. Typologically
conceived, this would mean that no individual of species A would ever hybridize
with any individual of species B. Botanists soon pointed out that this
did not correctly describe many situations in nature. They discovered case
alter case of occasional (sometimes even rather frequent) hybridization
between seemingly "good" sympatric species. Anderson (1949) went
so far as to claim that this was the normal situation with closely related
sympatric species and that through such "introgressive hybridization,"
as he called it, either species would be enriched by genes from other species.
Other authors minimized the frequency of such hybridization and considered
parallel variation in sympatric species as the residues of ancestral polymorphisms.
Recent molecular analysis has, however, confirmed the frequency of clandestine
introgression. However, if the two species continue their essential integrity,
they will be treated as species, in spite of the slight inefficiency of
their isolating mechanisms.
There is at least one case among oaks (Quercus) and one among
birches (Betula) where such introgression has apparently been going
on for millions of years without leading to a fusion of the parental species.
Similar cases apparently occur also in animals. After the destruction of
much of the southern periphery of the habitat of the gray wolf, the area
was invaded by coyotes and, owing to the fertility of the hybrids, the
crossing of male wolves with female coyotes led to an introgression of
alien genes into both wolf and coyote populations. The same was shown by
Templeton and associates (1989, 12) for the sympatric Hawaiian species
Drosophila silvestris and D. heteroneura. The fact that the
mitochondria are inherited only through the females greatly facilitates
the discovery of such cases of hybridization.
It is thus well established that a leakage of genes occurs among many
good "reproductively isolated" species. This induced me to revise
the definition of isolating mechanisms to "biological properties of
individuals which prevent the interbreeding [fusion] of populations"
(1970, 56). Thus, isolating mechanisms do not always prevent the occasional
interbreeding of non-conspecific individuals, but they nevertheless prevent
the complete fusion of such species populations. Clandestine hybridization
is apparently far more common among plants than among higher animals.
Among the invalid objections to the biological species concept is the
claim that it would work only if the acquisition of the isolating mechanisms
was a teleological process (Paterson 1985). However, Darwin already knew
that reproductive isolation between species is not acquired by teleological
ad hoc selection but simply as a byproduct of the process of divergence.
H. J. Muller and E. Mayr have further emphasized this point in their writings
and Mayr in particular has demonstrated that indeed behavioral isolating
mechanisms can be acquired through a change of function of factors favoring
sexual selection. Paterson's arguments do not in the least weaken the validity
of the BSC (Mayr 1988b, Coyne et al. 1987). The contingent nature of the
acquisition of isolating mechanisms is documented by their great diversity.
It would seem to be merely a matter of chance what kind of device is made
use of by a given incipient species to protect itself against outcrossing.
It includes not only purely genetic mechanisms such as sterility factors,
but the use of ecological and life history factors and (in animals) a number
of behavioral devices.
The evolutionist always stresses the genetic uniqueness of every individual
of a sexually reproducing population. However, the members of any species
also have in common many species-specific properties. This includes, in
particular, the isolating mechanisms but also many adaptations, for instance,
for niche utilization, as well as certain contingent, species specific
properties. If one knew the genetic basis of all the species specific characters,
one might be able to give a genetic characterization of a species taxon.
The BSC is based on the recognition of properties of populations. It
depends on the fact of non-interbreeding with other populations. For this
reason the concept is not applicable to organisms which do not form sexual
populations. The supporters of the BSC therefore agree with their critics
that the BSC does not apply to asexual (uniparental) organisms. Their genotype
does not require any protection because it is not threatened by destruction
through outcrossing. There are a number of suggestions of how species taxa
in asexual organisms can be delimited and defined, but this is outside
the present discussion. However, I find that any endeavor to propose a
species definition that is equally applicable to both sexually reproducing
and asexual populations misses the basic characteristics of the biological
species definition (the protection of harmonious gene pools).
It is important to emphasize that in the study of biological species
one deals with biological populations. Some non-biologists, including some
philosophers, seem to have difficulties appreciating how different biological
populations are from classes of inanimate objects (Kitchef 1989, 189 ~
194). Only a small fraction of any biological population reproduces, because
not every individual in a population survives up to the reproductive age
and reproduces successfully. This is true on the average for only two of
the total number of offspring of a prenatal pair in a sexually reproducing
species. A mentally retarded individual may have no opportunity to reproduce
but he is still a member of his population. In most marine organisms, with
their high number of larvae, successful survival and reproduction is to
a large extent a matter of chance, but most of the zygotes have, at the
moment of their formation, an equal probability of success. Kitcher describes
six situations which to him seem to cause difficulty for the concept of
population as presented by me. I believe that his objections can be answered,
although it would take me too far afield to do so here. The simplest solution
in most cases is to say that whatever is the product of the same gene pool
belongs to the same population, together with any new immigrants.
4. The two meanings of the term species. What the scientist actually
encounters in nature are populations of organisms. there is a considerable
range in the size of populations, ranging from the local deme to the species
taxon. the local deme is the community of potentially interbreeding individuals
at a locality (see also mayr 1963. 136), and the species taxon has been
referred to by dobzhansky as the "largest mendelian population."
the task of the biologist is to assign these populations to species. this
requires two operations: (1) to develop a concept of what a species is
resulting in the definition of the species category in the linnaean hierarchy,
and (2) to apply this concept when combining populations into species
taxa.
A number of recent writers on the species problem have failed to appreciate
that the word 'species' is applied to these two quite different entities
in nature, species taxa and the concept of the category species. As a result,
their so-called species definition is nothing but a recipe for the demarcation
of species taxa. This is, for instance, true for most of the recent so-called
phylogenetic species definitions. It is also largely true for Templeton's
(1989, 1994) cohesion species concept. A paper often quoted as a decisive
refutation of the BSC (Sokal and Crovello 1970) is perhaps an extreme example
of the confusion resulting from the failure to discriminate between the
species as category (concept) and as taxon.
(1) The species taxon. The word taxon refers to a concrete zoological or botanical object consisting of a classifiable population (or group of populations) of organisms. The house sparrow (Passer domesticus) and the potato (Solanum tubersum) are species taxa. Species taxa are particulars, "individuals," biopopulations. Being particulars, they can be described and delimited against other species taxa.
(2) The species category. Here the word 'species' indicates the rank
in the Linnaean hierarchy. The species category is the class that contains
all taxa of species rank. It articulates the concept of the biological
species and is defined by the species definition. The principal use of
the species definition is to facilitate a decision on the ranking of species
level populations, that is, to answer the question about an isolated population:
"Is it a full species or a subspecies?" The answer to this question
has to be based on inference (the criteria on the basis of which such a
decision is made are listed in the technical taxonomical literature, e.g.,
in Mayr and Ashlock 1991, 100-105). A complication is produced by the fact
that in the Linnaean hierarchy asexual "species" are also ranked
in the species category, even though they do not represent the BSC.
The literature traditionally has referred to the "species problem." However, it is now quite clear that there are two different sets of species problems, one being the problem of how to define the species (what species concept to adopt), and the other being how to apply this concept in the demarcation of species taxa. It is necessary to discuss these two sets of problems separately
.
Let me begin with a discussion of the meaning and history of the term
'biological species'.
5. Typological species versus biological species. The biological
species concept developed in the second half of the 19th century. up to
that time, from plato and aristotle until linnaeus and early 19th century
authors, one simply recognized "species," eide (plato), or kinds
(mill). since neither the taxonomists nor the philosophers made a strict
distinction between inanimate things and biological species, the species
definitions they gave were rather variable and not very specific. the
word 'species' conveyed the idea of a class of a class of objects,
members of which shared certain defining properties. Its definition
distinguished a species from all others. Such a class is constant, it
does not change in time, all deviations from the definition of the class
are merely "accidents," that is, imperfect manifestations of
the essence (eidos). Mill in 1843 introduced the word 'kind' for species
(and John Venn introduced 'natural kind' in 1866) and philosophers have
since used the term natural kind occasionally for species (as defined
above), particularly after B. Russell and Quine had adopted it. However,
if one reads a history of the term 'natural kind' (Hacking 1991) one has
the impression that no two authors understood quite the same thing by
this term, nor did they clearly discriminate between a term for classes
of inanimate objects and biological populations of organisms. There is
some discussion among philosophers whether there are several types of
natural kinds. But I will refrain from entering that discussion. The traditional
species concept going back to Plato's eidos is often referred to as the
typological species concept.
The current use of the term species for inanimate objects like nuclear
species or species of minerals reflects this classical concept. Up to the
19th century this was the most practical species concept also in biology.
The naturalists were busy making an inventory of species in nature and
the method they used for the discrimination of species was the identification
procedure of downward classification (Mayr 1982, 1992a). Species were recognized
by their differences, they were kinds, they were types. This concept was
usually referred to as the morphological or typological species concept.
Even though this was virtually the universal concept of species, there
were a number of prophetic spirits who, in their writings, foreshadowed
a different species concept, later designated as the biological species
concept (BSC). The first among these was perhaps Buffon (Sloan 1987),
but a careful search through the natural history literature would probably
yield quite a few similar statements. Darwin unquestionably had adopted
a biological species concept in the 1830s in his Transmutation Notebook
even though later he largely gave it up (Kotller 1978, Mayr 1992b). Throughout
the 19th century, quite a few authors proposed a species definition that
was an approach to the BSC (Mayr 1957).
Late in the 19th century and in the first quarter of the 20th century,
taxonomists like K. Jordan, E. Poulton, L. Plate, and E. Stresemann were
among those who most clearly articulated the biological species concept,
as will be shown below.
As long as the inventory taking of kinds of organisms was the primary
concern of the students of species, the typological species concept was
a reasonably satisfactory concept. But when species were studied more carefully,
all sorts of properties were discovered that did not fit with a species
concept that was strictly based on morphology. This was particularly true
for behavioral and ecological properties. Most damaging was the discovery
of the unreliability of morphological characters for the recognition of
biological species.
Morphological difference had traditionally been the decisive criterion
of species. Population A (e.g., continental North American savanna sparrows)
was determined to be a different species from population B (e.g., savanna
sparrows from Sable Island, Nova Scotia), if it was deemed to be sufficiently
different from it by morphological characters. This definition was very
useful in various clerical operations of the taxonomist such as in the
cataloguing of species taxa and their arrangement in keys and in collections.
However, for two reasons it was inadequate if not misleading for a study
of species in nature. The first one is that, as is now realized, there
are many good biological species that do not differ at all morphologically
or only very slightly. Such cryptic species have been designated sibling
species. They occur at lesser or greater frequency in almost all groups
of organisms (Mayr 1948). They are apparently particularly common among
protozoans. Sonneborn (1975) eventually recognized 14 sibling species under
what he had originally considered a single species, Paramecium aurelia.
Many sibling species are genetically as different from each other as morphologically
highly distinct species. A second reason why a morphological species concept
proved unsatisfactory is that there are often numerous different morphological
types within a biological species, either due to individual genetic variation
or due to different life history categories (males, females, immatures)
which are morphologically far more different from each other than are the
corresponding morphological types in different species.
The morphological difference between two species fails to shed any light
on the true biological significance of species, the Darwinian why question.
So-called "morphological species definitions" are in principle
merely operational instructions for the demarcation of species taxa. The
realization of these deficiencies of the typological species concept led,
in due time, to its almost complete replacement among zoologists by the
so-called biological species concept (BSC).
Many of the authors who profess to adhere to the morphological species
concept do not seem to realize that unconsciously they base their decisions
ultimately on the reproductive community principle of the BSC. They combine
drastically different phenotypes into a single species because they have
observed that they were produced by the same gene pool. This was already
done by Linnaeus when he synonymized the names he had given to the female
mallard and the immature goshawk.
6. Insufficient or erroneous species criteria.
6.1 Characterized by its Evolutionary Potential. Some 50 years
ago the fact that species are not constant but the product of evolution
and still potentially continuing to evolve was included by several authors
in the species definition. For instance, in 1945 A.E. Emerson defined the
biological species as follows: "a species is an evolved or evolving
genetically distinctive, reproductively isolated, natural population."
Indeed, nothing distinguishes a biological species better from a natural
kind than its capacity to evolve. Yet, this is not a sufficient criterion.
Everything else in living nature also has the capacity to evolve. Every
population, every structure and organ is the product of evolution and continues
to evolve, genera and higher taxa evolve, and so do faunas and floras.
Most of all, the capacity for evolving is not the crucial biological criterion
of a species, which is the protection of its gene pool. It is for this
reason that I and most adherents of the biological species concept omit
"evolving" from the species definition. Those authors who still
emphasize the evolutionary aspect of the species have never made it clear
what the real significance of species is.
The paleontologist Simpson attempted to make evolution the basis of a species concept: "An evolutionary species is a lineage (an ancestral-descendant sequence of populations) evolving separately from others and with its own unitary evolutionary role and tendencies" (1961, 153). He replaced the clear-cut criterion (reproductive isolation) of the biological species concept with such undefined vague terms as "maintains its identity" (does this include geographical barriers?), "evolutionary tendencies" (what are they and how can they be determined?). and "historical fate." What population in nature can ever be classified by its "historical fate" when this is entirely in the future?
.
Furthermore, as I pointed out previously (Mayr 1988a. 323--324), this
concept encounters three additional major difficulties:(1) it is applicable
only to monotypic species and every geographical isolate would, by implication,
have to be treated as a different species; (2) there are no empirical criteria
by which either evolutionary tendency or historical fate can be observed
in a given fossil sample (Simpson 1961, 154 l60): and (3) the definition
does not help in the lower or upper demarcation of chronospecies, even
though the main reason why the evolutionary species concept was apparently
introduced, was in order to deal with the time dimension, which is not
considered in the non-dimensional biological species concept. Indeed, Simpson's
definition is essentially an operational recipe for the demarcation of
fossil species.
6.2 Other Unsatisfactory Species Concepts. The so-called phylogenetic
species concept (Wheeler, 1996) is actually nothing more than the revival
of a purely morphological species concept (Mayr 1996). The so-called ecological
species concept, based on the niche occupation of a species, is for two
reasons not workable. In almost all more widespread species there are local
populations which differ in their niche occupation. An ecological species
definition would require that these populations be called different species
even though, on the basis of all other criteria, it is obvious that they
are not. More fatal for the ecological species concept are the trophic
species of cichlids (A. Meyer 1990) which differentiate within a single
set of offspring from the same parents. Finally, there are the numerous
cases (but none exhaustively analyzed) where two sympatric species seem
to occupy the same niche, in conflict with Gause's rule. All this evidence
shows not only how many difficulties an ecological species concept faces
but also how unable it is to answer the Darwinian why? question for the
existence of species.
Perhaps Templeton's (1989, 1994) cohesion species concept should be
mentioned here. It attempts to combine the best components of several other
species concepts but fails to escape the resulting conflicts. It emphasizes
the presence of gene flow, but tails to distinguish between the internal
(isolating mechanisms) and external (geographic isolation) barriers to
gene flow; it stresses cohesion through gene flow, but claims also to be
"applicable to taxa reproducing asexually," which have no gene
flow. It attempts to characterize an evolutionary lineage, but does not
indicate how to delimit such an open ended lineage at either end: and he
does not state how to deal with the geographic variation of demographic-ecological
attributes in widespread polytypic species. I do not see any advantages
of this concept over the BSC.
6.3 Two Origins of Species. Normally one calls a population a
species when it has acquired isolating mechanisms, protecting its gene
pool against its parental or a sister species. In other words, such a species
is the product of the process of multiplication of species. However, the
paleontologist encounters also cases where a phyletic lineage changes over
time to such a degree that sooner or later it is considered to be a different
species. The occurrence of the origin of such phyletic species is usually
ignored when non-paleontologists speak of speciation. Phyletic evolution
does not produce an additional entity, it merely modifies an existing one.
Nevertheless, the changes are sometimes sufficiently pronounced so that
the paleontologist gives a new species name to the modified phyletic lineage.
Gingerich (1979), in particular, has called attention to the relative infrequency
of such cases. Such new species differ usually only in size and proportions,
but not in the acquisition of any notable innovations. Such phyletic speciation
must be mentioned because it is what a paleontologist usually seems to
have in mind when he speaks of speciation. It is for such species that
Simpson proposed the evolutionary species definition. It has been impossible
so far to discover any criteria by which a phyletic species can be demarcated
against ancestral and descendent "species." It is for this reason
that Hennig (1966) rejects the recognition of new species without branching.
In his discussion of the origin of species, Hennig (1966) only considers
the case of a phyletic lineage splitting by dichopatric speciation into
two daughter species. He considers both daughter species as new species.
He ignores the more frequent case where by budding from a phyletic lineage
a new daughter species originates through peripatric speciation. By his
definition, Hennig is forced to call the phyletic lineage after the budding
point a new species, even though it has not changed at all. Hennig's species
definition results also in difficulties when a phyletic lineage gradually
changes into a new species, even though there has been no splitting of
the lineage nor any budding. Hennig is forced to ignore such phyletic speciation
no matter how conclusive the indirect (morphological) evidence for the
origin of a new species may be. On the whole, whenever a biologist speaks
of species, he has in mind the product of the process of multiplication
of species, not the product of phyletic evolution.
6.4 Multidimensional Species Taxa. Species taxa ordinarily have
an extension in space (geography) and in time. They are composed of local
or temporally circumscribed populations which differ slightly from each
other. Such populations, when they are considered to be conspecific, are
combined into a polytypic species. The major species problem in
species level taxonomy is to decide which local populations to combine
into polytypic species. Since this decision is based on inference, it is
always somewhat uncertain. The paleontologist encounters in the time dimension
the same problem which the student of the geographic variation of species
encounters in the spatial dimension. During the period when the typological
species concept was dominant, almost any isolated population that differed
by a morphological character was called a different species. Since the
rise of the biological species concept, the question is always asked whether
or not such a population would interbreed with other populations differing
in space or time if they would meet in nature.
The widespread use of polytypic species has several advantages for information
conveyance as pointed out by Mayr and Ashlock (1991.41). Conspecific populations
that differ from each other morphologically are called subspecies. If such
subspecies are part of a series of contiguous populations, they are a purely
taxonomic device. However, they are incipient species if such subspecies
are geographically isolated. They may in due time acquire the needed isolating
mechanisms to function as well separated species. Owing to the gradualness
of the process of speciation, every incipient species at one time in its
cycle goes through the subspecies stage.
7. A major criticism of the biological species concept. The biological
species concept is least vulnerable to criticism in the non-dimensional
situation, as i have emphasized in numerous previous papers. when two
populations (in reproductive condition) meet at the same place at the
same time, they either interbreed because they are conspecific or they
do not do so because they are different reproductive communities (different
species). in that case, their isolating mechanisms keep them apart.
A geographically isolated population also has the isolating mechanisms
of the species to which it belongs, but they are, so to speak, invisible,
since they do not need to be activated. In some of my earlier species definitions
I said of isolated populations that they might be "potentially"
reproductively isolated. If in the future any contact with a different
species population was going to be established, the isolating mechanism
would at once spring into action, thereby documenting their existence.
Speciation, as Darwin has shown, is normally a gradual populational
phenomenon. Sudden, saltational speciation as in the case of' allopolyploidy,
seems to be virtually absent in most groups of sexually reproducing organisms.
Owing to the gradualness of the speciation process one should find in nature
populations that are on the way to becoming separate species, but have
not yet quite completed the process. Such "semi-species" are
indeed found. They are documented, for instance, by the so-called zones
of secondary hybridization. Here two incipient species, usually expanding
from a Pleistocene refuge, hybridize along a more or less long contact
line, but the hybrid zone stays narrow, often less than 100 km wide, even
though this contact zone may have existed for 5-10,000 years. Both of the
two semi-species discriminate against introgressing genes of the other
semi-species, as documented by the lowered fertility of hybrid pairs. Hybridization
is too indiscriminate in the contact zone to permit a selection for isolating
mechanisms, as Darwin already remarked. The effects of continuing hybridization
completely override the counterselection against inferior hybrids and introgressing
genes so that it does not come to any parapatric speciation. Isolating
mechanisms, however, can be further improved after speciation between overlapping
species has been complete (Buttin 1989: Lion and Price 1994)
During a period of geographic isolation the presence of species specific
isolating mechanisms can only be inferred. Curiously, there are large numbers
of taxonomists who seem to be unaware how frequent the need is for inference
making in scientific theorizing. The most helpful inference on the species
status of isolated populations is greater morphological difference as compared
to other populations that are seemingly conspecific. To be able to use
degree of morphological difference in order to be able to infer species
status, one must have a "yard stick," which determines which
of the isolated populations already have reached species status and which
others have not. Constructing such a yard stick requires a thorough knowledge
of related species and subspecies and is a rather technical procedure.
It is described in Mayr and Ashlock 1991, 100-105.
What must be emphasized, because this is so often misunderstood, is
that this procedure is not a falling back on a morphological species concept,
but simply uses the degree of morphological difference as an indication
of the underlying degree of reproductive isolation. This procedure is very
much the same as that described so perceptively by G.G. Simpson (1961)
for identical twins: an individual is an identical twin not because he
is so similar to another individual, but rather, he is so similar to it
because he is its identical (monozygotic) twin. Analogously, an individual
belongs to species X not because it has the same species specific characters
as other individuals of species X, but it has these species specific characteristics
because, like other conspecifics, it is part of the species.
Curiously, Mahner (1994) has reversed the roles of the concept of reproductive
community and species-specific characters. For a Darwinian to determine
the significance of a biological process one always starts with the Darwinian
why question. As far as the species is concerned, the answer clearly is
protection of the gene pool through establishment of a reproductive community.
The next question is how, and here the answer is isolating mechanisms and
other species-specific attributes. These are indicators of species status,
but do not constitute the basic meaning of species. I have pointed this
out as the reason why isolation is the primary and recognition (the answer
to the how question) the secondary aspect of the species (Mayr 1988b).
When I used morphological inferences (Mayr 1992a) to determine which nominal
species of plants in the township of Concord (Massachusetts) were good
biological species, I did not shift to a morphological species concept,
as Whittemore (1993) seemed to think.
8. The ontology of the species taxon. A considerable clarification
of the status of species taxa was achieved when it was realized by some
taxonomists that species taxa are not classes but particulars or "individuals"
or biopopulations, or by whatever other term you may want to characterize
this difference. much of the argument on this issue seems to be semantic,
and this is not the place to deal once more with this problem. the belief
that species are concrete particulars was recently rediscovered by ghiselin
and hull, but it has actually been the view of many, if not most naturalists
for more than one hundred years, as i have shown (mayr 1988a). as early
as 1866, haeckel said "die art ist ein individuum." for a detailed
discussion of this conclusion, see papers by ghiselin (1971-1972), hull
(1975), and mayr (1987, 1988a).
One could also say that organisms that belong to sexually reproducing
species have two sets of characteristics. First, those that serve as isolating
mechanisms and are jointly responsible for the fact that this population
of individuals constitutes a biological species, and, second, all other
properties of the species. Organisms which belong to two related species
usually share a large number of characteristics but this does not make
them conspecific. The important thing is that they differ by a certain
limited number of attributes, their isolating mechanisms, which
prevent them from interbreeding and thus prevent the destruction of the
integrity of their gene pool. To repeat, certain individuals are part of
a certain species not because they have certain characteristics in common
but they share these characteristics because they belong to a single reproductive
community, a biological species. And this is the reason why we must rely
on the biological meaning of species in articulating the BSC.
9. Difficulties in delimiting species taxa. There are a number
of evolutionary processes that make the delimitation of species taxa from
each other and the determination of their rank often very difficult. the
most important is so-called mosaic evolution. this means that certain
characters may evolve much more readily than others. this results in a
discord between the message provided by various characters. in particular,
reproductive isolation and morphological difference often do not evolve
in parallel with each other. this is why sibling species exist; they are
reproductively isolated but morphologically indistinguishable. there is
no simple recipe by which the problem posed by mosaic evolution can be
solved. the decision has to be made in each case on the basis of the totality
of information as well as the usefulness of the proposed classification.
What is often the basic problem is an insufficiency of needed information.
This is why the decision about the status of isolated populations has to
be based on inference, it is not given directly by the available data.
This is as true for populations that are geographically isolated as for
stages in the evolution of a single phyletic lineage.
The basic message which emerges from this account of the numerous difficulties
of the species problem is that the definition of the biological species
must be based on its biological significance, which is the maintenance
of the integrity of well balanced, harmonious gene pools. The actual demarcation
of species taxa uses morphological, geographical, ecological, behavioral,
and molecular information to infer the rank of isolated populations.
Notes
1 I am not aware of a single major feature
of living nature of which this claim could be refuted.
2 By "superior" I meant would be rewarded by leaving
a greater number of viable descendants.
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