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Life

Hybrids: When two species become three

By Bob Holmes

14 June 2006

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Heliconius heurippa had often been suspected to be a hybrid

(Image: Moritz Wolf/Alamy)

SPECIES do not always arise by new branches forming on the family tree. Sometimes the branches merge, and two species hybridise to form a third.

Such hybrid speciation has previously been reported in plants, but never conclusively in animals. Now a study of butterflies has revealed that a wild species of the brightly coloured Heliconius butterfly in South America arose via the merger of two related species. What’s more, something resembling this species can be artificially created in the lab.

Heliconius cydno, a butterfly that lives…

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