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Evolution may not be slow or random.


Studies of fruit flies taking over the New World and stickleback stickleback, common name for members of the family Gasterosteidae, small fishes, widely distributed in both fresh- and saltwaters of the Northern Hemisphere. Sticklebacks range from 1 1-2 to 4 in. (3.7–10 cm) in length and lack true scales; they are equipped with short, strong spines in front of the dorsal and on the ventral fins, the number varying with the species. fish adapting to Canadian lakes suggest that evolution can move fast and take predictable paths.

An Old World fruit fly fruit fly, common name for any of the flies of the families Tephritidae and Drosophilidae. All fruit flies are very small insects that lay their eggs in various plant tissues. The Tephritidae contains about 1,200 species characterized by wide heads, black or steely green or blue bodies, iridescent greenish eyes, and wings that are usually mottled brown or black., Drosophila Drosophila /Dro·soph·i·la/ (dro-sof´il-ah) a genus of fruit flies. D. melanogas´ter is a small species used extensively in experimental genetics. subobscura, turned up in Chile in 1978 and seems to have liked the Americas. It has already spread as far north as Vancouver Island Vancouver Island (1991 pop. 579,921), 12,408 sq mi (32,137 sq km), SW British Columbia, Canada, in the Pacific Ocean; largest island off W North America. It is c.285 mi (460 km) long and c.30 to 80 mi (50–130 km) wide and is separated from the mainland by Queen Charlotte, Georgia, and Juan de Fuca straits. The rugged island, a partially submerged portion of the Coast Mts., rises to 7,219 ft (2,200 m) at Golden Hinde Mt. and as far east as Utah. George W. Gilchrist of Clarkson University in Potsdam Potsdam (pŏts`dăm), city (1994 pop. 139,262), capital of Brandenburg, E Germany, on the Havel River, near Berlin. It is an industrial center and rail junction. Manufactures include processed food, textiles, electrotechnical equipment, boats, and locomotives., N.Y., warns that this interloper is crowding out a native fruit fly, although the public isn't weeping at the tragedy yet.

Gilchrist and his colleagues checked flies in 11 North American sites in 1997 and 10 European ones in 1998. The team confirmed earlier reports that in Europe, D. subobscura grows longer wings in the north than in the south. Danish flies outspan their Spanish relatives by 4 percent, the team reports in the Jan. 14 SCIENCE.

Ten years after the fruit flies immigrated, there was no sign of such a pattern along coastal Chile, other researchers had found. Now, the pattern has emerged in North America. Whereas males differ only by 1 or 2 percent, higher-latitude female flies grow wings 4 percent longer than Californian females do.

Threespine sticklebacks, in the genus Gasterosteus, also show evolution marching down similar paths in similar places, according to Howard D. Rundle of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and his colleagues.

Mitochondrial DNA of sticklebacks in Enos Enos (ē`nŏs), in the Bible, son of Seth., Paxton, and Priest Lakes in coastal west Canada suggests that all the forms of the fish evolved from a common seagoing ancestor, the researchers report in the Jan. 14 SCIENCE. That ancestor seems to have yielded a pair of stickleback types in each lake, a larger one hunting invertebrates
1. having no spinal column.
2. any animal having no spinal column.


in·ver·te·brate (n-vûrt
 along the bottom at lake edges and another straining plankton plankton: see marine biology. out of the open water.

In more than 750 laboratory tests, the researchers found that fish were more likely to breed with their counterparts from another lake than with fish from a different habitat in their own lake.
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Title Annotation:evidence supports evolutionary paths
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 29, 2000
Words:334
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