asked 230k views
0 votes
When we look at islands across the planet (think the islands of the galápagos and hawaii) we see that there are a remarkable number of island endemic species, species that are found nowhere else. what is a possible explanation for this observation? island isolation promotes allopatric speciation. vicariance events are more common on islands than in mainland environments. extinction rates are lower in islands so species that have gone extinct elsewhere persist on islands. sympatric speciation on islands is easier than in mainland environments because rates of chromosomal evolution are higher on islands. sympatric speciation on islands is easier than in mainland environments because levels of disruptive selection are higher on islands?

asked
User Rlsaj
by
7.4k points

1 Answer

5 votes
There are number of endemic species, because island isolation promotes allopatric speciation and the latter occurs when species become separated from each other to the level that prevents genetic recombination.  
answered
User Abhishek Bedi
by
8.2k points
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.