speciáció
Speciáció, commonly referred to in English as speciation, is the biological process through which populations evolve to become distinct species. It is a fundamental mechanism of evolution and the primary driver of biodiversity. The concept was first articulated by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace in the mid‑nineteenth century and has since become central to modern evolutionary biology.
Two major categories of speciation are generally recognized: allopatric and sympatric. Allopatric speciation occurs when physical
Reproductive isolation, the key outcome of speciation, can be pre‑zygotic (e.g., behavioral differences, temporal isolation) or
Speciation events are documented in the fossil record and are inferred from molecular phylogenies. Whole‑genome analyses