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EVOLUTIONARY CONSTRAINT AND ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES
Authors:Douglas J Futuyma
Institution:1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794;2. E‐mail: futuyma@life.bio.sunysb.edu
Abstract:One of the most important shifts in evolutionary biology in the past 50 years is an increased recognition of sluggish evolution and failures to adapt, which seem paradoxical in view of abundant genetic variation and many instances of rapid local adaptation. I review hypotheses of evolutionary constraint (or restraint), and suggest that although constraints on individual characters or character complexes may often reside in the structure or paucity of genetic variation, organism‐wide stasis, as described by paleontologists, might better be explained by a hypothesis of ephemeral divergence, according to which the spatial or temporal divergence of populations is often short‐lived because of interbreeding with nondivergent populations. Among the many consequences of acknowledging evolutionary constraints, community ecology is being transformed as it takes into account phylogenetic niche conservatism and the strong imprint of deep history.
Keywords:Community ecology  ephemeral divergence  evolutionary constraint  genetic variation  genostasis  limits to adaptation  phylogenetic conservatism  stasis
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