sympatric - meaning and definition. What is sympatric
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What (who) is sympatric - definition

EXISTENCE OF TWO SPECIES WITHIN THE SAME GEOGRAPHIC REGION
Sympatric; Sympatricity; Syntopy; Syntopic; Sympatrically; Sympatric species
  • Sympatric [[pitcher plant]]s, ''[[Nepenthes jamban]]'' (left) and ''[[Nepenthes lingulata]]'' (right) in [[Sumatra]]n upper montane forest
  • Different modes of [[speciation]]

sympatric         
[s?m'patr?k]
¦ adjective Biology (of animal or plant species or populations) occurring in the same or overlapping geographical areas. Compare with allopatric.
Derivatives
sympatry noun
Origin
early 20th cent.: from sym- + Gk patra 'fatherland' + -ic.
Sympatry         
In biology, two related species or populations are considered sympatric when they exist in the same geographic area and thus frequently encounter one another. An initially interbreeding population that splits into two or more distinct species sharing a common range exemplifies sympatric speciation.
Sympatric speciation         
  • In sympatric speciation, reproductive isolation evolves within a population without the aid of geographic barriers.
PROCESS THROUGH WHICH NEW SPECIES EVOLVE FROM A SINGLE ANCESTRAL SPECIES WHILE INHABITING THE SAME GEOGRAPHIC REGION
Heteropatry; Heteropatric speciation; Sympatic speciation
Sympatric speciation is the evolution of a new species from a surviving ancestral species while both continue to inhabit the same geographic region. In evolutionary biology and biogeography, sympatric and sympatry are terms referring to organisms whose ranges overlap so that they occur together at least in some places.

Wikipedia

Sympatry

In biology, two related species or populations are considered sympatric when they exist in the same geographic area and thus frequently encounter one another. An initially interbreeding population that splits into two or more distinct species sharing a common range exemplifies sympatric speciation. Such speciation may be a product of reproductive isolation – which prevents hybrid offspring from being viable or able to reproduce, thereby reducing gene flow – that results in genetic divergence. Sympatric speciation may, but need not, arise through secondary contact, which refers to speciation or divergence in allopatry followed by range expansions leading to an area of sympatry. Sympatric species or taxa in secondary contact may or may not interbreed.

Examples of use of sympatric
1. "Sympatric speciation", a division into species where the two groups live in the same place, as Curry is proposing, is even tougher.
2. Among the controversies that students of evolution commonly face, these are genuinely challenging and of great educational value÷ neutralism versus selectionism in molecular evolution; adaptationism; group selection; punctuated equilibrium; cladism; "evo–devo"; the "Cambrian Explosion"; mass extinctions; interspecies competition; sympatric speciation; sexual selection; the evolution of sex itself; evolutionary psychology; Darwinian medicine and so on.