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THE FOUNDING OF A NEW POPULATION OF DARWIN'S FINCHES
Authors:Peter R. Grant  B. Rosemary Grant
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, 08544-1003
Abstract:We report the natural colonization of the small Galápagos island Daphne Major by the large ground finch (Geospiza magnirostris). Immigrants of this species were present in every year of a 22-yr study, 1973–1994. Typically they arrived after a breeding season and left at the beginning of the next one. Geospiza magnirostris bred on the island for the first time in the exceptionally wet El Niño year of 1982–1983, and bred in all subsequent years except drought years. In agreement with theoretical expectations the frequency of inbreeding was unusually high. Pronounced fluctuating asymmetry in tarsus length, together with slightly reduced breeding success of inbreeding pairs, suggests a low level of inbreeding depression. Despite this, the population increased from 5 breeding individuals in 1983 to 20 breeding individuals in 1992, and probably more than twice that number in 1993, largely through recruitment of locally born birds.
Keywords:Biogeography  colonization  cultural drift  El Niñ  o  exponential increase  finches  founder effects  inbreeding  selection
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