Italian sparrow joins family as a new species Skip to main content

Italian sparrow joins family as a new species


Italian sparrow (Image: Ivan Ivanov) The Italian sparrow is a cross between the house sparrow and the Spanish sparrow

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Scientists in Norway say they have conclusive genetic evidence that sparrows recently evolved a third species.
The Italian sparrow, they argue, is a cross between the ubiquitous house sparrow and the Spanish sparrow.
Whether it is a distinct species has been the subject of a long scientific debate.
The Oslo team say in the journal Molecular Ecology that their evidence resolves the question.
Many bird-watching guides already identify the Italian sparrow as a separate species.
But this study, led by evolutionary biologist Glenn-Peter Saetre from the University of Oslo, is a genetic snapshot that appears to settle the debate.
The researchers studied populations of Italian and Spanish sparrows that share the same habitat in the south-east of Italy.
Italian sparrow (Image: Elin Hjelle) The bird is already listed as a distinct species by many bird guides
They took blood samples from the birds in order to extract DNA.
"By examining the genetics, we have shown conclusively that the Italian sparrow is of mixed origin - it is a hybrid of the house sparrow and the Spanish sparrow," Dr Saetre told BBC Nature.
"Second, and perhaps equally important - it is not reproducing with the Spanish sparrow, even though the two birds live side-by-side."
If the birds had been breeding, the scientists say that they would have found genetic "intermediates" - birds with genes from both species.
"But we didn't find this, so we think [the two species] have formed some kind of reproductive barrier to each other," Prof Saetre said.
"Either the [Italian sparrows] just don't like the look of the [Spanish sparrows] or perhaps they have evolved a different breeding season.
"We're not sure what the reason is, but they are not reproducing."
In evolutionary biology, the definition of a distinct species is not entirely clear-cut.
William Amos, professor of evolutionary genetics at the University of Cambridge, explained: "I think the best definition we have is the one that says that different species are those that, under natural conditions, tend not to interbreed.
"Because as soon as you have interbreeding, all those barriers [between those groups of animals] break down."
If Italian sparrows have indeed stopped reproducing with Spanish sparrows, they will gradually, generation by generation, become even more genetically distinct.
As well as providing strong evidence of this rare event - termed speciation - the scientists believe the research shows that the crossing of two species to form a new one might be "more common in nature than previously assumed".

http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/14947902

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