The existence of species rests on a metastable equilibrium between inbreeding and outbreeding. An essay on the close relationship between speciation, inbreeding and recessive mutations
Etienne Joly (IPBS)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new model of speciation where small inbreeding groups 'bud' from ancestral populations, driven by advantageous recessive mutations, challenging traditional divergence-based views.
Contribution
It introduces a model where speciation occurs through inbreeding and recessive mutations, emphasizing direct selection for reproductive barriers rather than divergence.
Findings
Higher inbreeding correlates with increased speciation events.
Recessive mutations play a central role in the emergence of new species.
Documented cases support the model of inbreeding-driven speciation.
Abstract
Background: Speciation corresponds to the progressive establishment of reproductive barriers between groups of individuals derived from an ancestral stock. Since Darwin did not believe that reproductive barriers could be selected for, he proposed that most events of speciation would occur through a process of separation and divergence, and this point of view is still shared by most evolutionary biologists today. Results: I do, however, contend that, if so much speciation occurs, the most likely explanation is that there must be conditions where reproductive barriers can be directly selected for. In other words, situations where it is advantageous for individuals to reproduce preferentially within a small group and reduce their breeding with the rest of the ancestral population. This leads me to propose a model whereby new species arise not by populations splitting into separate…
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