Fast Lizards, Slow Corals ■ 237
around or swim extremely long distances. There
are few physical barriers yet many separate,
unique species. How do new species form when
populations are free to mix and mingle?
Caribbean Corals
Carlos Prada did not spend much of his time at
the University of Puerto Rico in a classroom.
Instead, he spent it in the ocean, studying corals,
a type of marine invertebrate. On regular dives
onto the Caribbean reef, the graduate student
documented the morphology of a species of coral
named Eunicea flexuosa, commonly called “sea
fans.” At 12 different locations along the Puerto
Rican coast, Prada observed different morphol-
ogies of the coral at different depths. In shallow
areas, less than 15 feet from the surface, the sea
fans were wide, with a broad network of thick
branches like a bush. In deeper areas, between
15 and 55 feet from the surface, the sea fans were
much taller and spindly, resembling trees with
networks of thin branches.
“They’re supposed to be the same species,
but they really looked different at different
depths,” says Prada. Curious about whether
the morphologies were due to genetics or a
result of the surrounding environment shap-
ing the animals as they grew, Prada began
Time
A single plant species is
distributed over a broad
geographic range.
The sea level rises and isolates plant
populations from one another. The
populations may adapt to different
environments on opposite sides of the
barrier, indirectly causing genetic changes
that reduce their ability to interbreed.
When the barrier is removed,
the plants recolonize the
intervening area and mingle,
but do not interbreed.
Range of overlap
Time
Figure 13.7
Physical barriers can produce allopatric
speciation by blocking gene flow
Allopatric speciation can occur when populations
are separated by a geographic barrier, such as a
rising sea.
Q1: What factors must be present for
allopatric speciation to occur?
Q2: If a geographic barrier is removed
and the two reunited populations
intermingle and breed, what attributes
must the offspring have in order for the
two populations, according to the biological
species concept, to be considered still the
same species?
Q3: If the two populations in question 2 are
determined to still be the same species, did
allopatric speciation occur?