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Evolution's impact on ecosystems confirmed

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, April 2 (UPI) -- Canadian scientists say they have conducted the first experiment that shows the evolution of new species impacts the environment.

Scientists at the University of British Columbia created mini-ecosystems in large aquatic tanks using different species of three-spine stickleback fish and saw substantial differences in the ecosystems within 11 weeks.

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Stickleback fish originated in the ocean, but began populating freshwater lakes and streams following the last ice age. The researchers said that during the past 10,000 years -- a relatively short time span in evolutionary terms -- different species with distinct physical traits have emerged in some fresh water lakes.

The UBC study involved new species found in British Columbia lakes -- limnetic sticklebacks that have narrow mouths, benthic sticklebacks with a wide gape and a generalist species to represent the probable ancestor of the two species.

"Simply by what they eat and how they live, even young species that have 'recently' diversified can have a major impact on their food web," says study lead author Luke Harmon, who conducted the study while a UBC post-doctoral fellow. He is now an assistant professor at the University of Idaho. "This study adds to a broader body of literature showing that species diversity matters in important ways."

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The research that included co-author Professor Dolph Schluter is reported in the early online edition of the journal Nature.

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