Character Displacement - Research Article from World of Genetics

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 3 pages of information about Character Displacement.

Character Displacement - Research Article from World of Genetics

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 3 pages of information about Character Displacement.
This section contains 739 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Character Displacement Encyclopedia Article

Character displacement is the term used to describe an evolutionary change that occurs when two similar species inhabit the same environment. Under such conditions, natural selection favors a divergence in the characters--morphology, ecology, behavior, or physiology--of the organisms. The concept has been understood at least since the English naturalist Charles Darwin (1809-1882) was putting together his argument for evolution, but the idea was only formalized in the middle of the twentieth century.

In 1956, the American entomologists William L. Brown (1922-1997) and Edward O. Wilson (1929-) compared the characters of a number of species living together--or, in technical terms, living in sympatry--with characters in the same species living apart, or in allopatry. They found that sympatric species possessed many different characters although these same species were sometimes indistinguishable when living allopatrically. Brown and Wilson concluded that these situations resulted from competition: because the species were similar, they...

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This section contains 739 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Character Displacement Encyclopedia Article
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Character Displacement from Gale. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.