Ecotypic variation
In population genetics, ecotypic variation is the type of genetic variation found in a large continuous geographic populations. Variation of this kind is homogeneous, due to factors such as gene flow. In 1954 Ernst Mayr wrote a landmark paper attacking the idea that subspecies in ecotypic populations lead to formation of incipient species.[1] According to Mayr species formation occurred in populations which were small and isolated, that is, populations which exemplified typostrophic variation.
Notes
- Mayr, E. "Change of genetic environment and evolution." In Julian Huxley et al., eds., Evolution as a Process. London: Allen and Unwin, pp. 157-180.
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