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・ Symphonic Studies (Schumann)
・ Symphonic Variations
・ Symphonic Variations (ballet)
・ Symphonic Variations (Dvořák)
・ Symphonic Variations (Franck)
・ Symphonica
・ Sympathy for the Devil (audio drama)
・ Sympathy for the Devil (disambiguation)
・ Sympathy for the Devil (film)
・ Sympathy for the Lobster
・ Sympathy for the Record Industry
・ Sympathy for the Underdog
・ Sympathy in Summer
・ Sympathy Sessions
・ Sympatric speciation
Sympatry
・ Sympecma
・ Sympecma fusca
・ Symperga
・ Symperga balyi
・ Symperga puncticollis
・ Sympergoides nasutus
・ Sympetalae
・ Sympetalandra
・ Sympetalandra schmutzii
・ Sympetalistis
・ Sympetrum
・ Sympetrum ambiguum
・ Sympetrum costiferum
・ Sympetrum danae


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Sympatry : ウィキペディア英語版
Sympatry

In biology, two species or populations are considered sympatric when they exist in the same geographic area and thus regularly 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 does not imply secondary contact, which is 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.
==Types of populations==
Four main types of population pairs exist in nature. Sympatric populations (or species) contrast with parapatric populations, which contact one another in adjacent but not shared ranges and do not interbreed; peripatric species, which are separated only by areas in which neither organism occurs; and allopatric species, which occur in entirely distinct ranges that are neither adjacent nor overlapping. Allopatric populations isolated from one another by geographical factors (e.g., mountain ranges or bodies of water) may experience genetic – and, ultimately, phenotypic – changes in response to their varying environments. These may drive allopatric speciation, which is arguably the dominant mode of speciation.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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