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  • 6 months ago
Charles Darwin first published his seminal work on evolution more than 150 years ago. Since that time, one particular question of how new species form has confounded scientists. But a study of palms on remote Lord Howe Island is changing that and helping to solve the evolutionary mystery.

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00:00These palms may look similar, but they're actually two different species.
00:09The two palms we have at Lord Howe Island, they evolved on this tiny island while they're living next to each other.
00:17The first proof in the world of sympatric speciation.
00:21That means they evolved from a common ancestor despite a lack of geographic separation,
00:27a process so rare even Darwin considered it unlikely.
00:31We found something totally different from what we believed was the case for species diversity.
00:37So imagine a few humans on an island for one million years.
00:43Nobody would think that they would evolve into different species, but actually plants do.
00:49This sandy soil.
00:51Now the soil here is helping scientists understand why.
00:55A 20 year study of Kentia palms suggests fungi has been a major influence on their evolution.
01:03So what we are discovering is that the relationship between this fungi and the plants is very intimate.
01:11And actually the plant and the fungi can make like specific partnership that allows them to sort of survive stressful conditions.
01:22And Lord Howe Island's isolation from human contact until the late 1700s is providing the ideal scientific control.
01:32Lord Howe Island is like a natural laboratory for evolutionary biology.
01:37So this is the controlled environment of the experiment.
01:40One tray will have mycorrhizae and one won't from the same area.
01:44What we're trying to achieve here is to see the differences in growing or the germination rate or the size of what's been grown.
01:53This may all sound like something out of a high school biology class, but those involved in the project say it has real world applications to help people and the planet adapt in the face of climate change.
02:05So the more we understand about these processes, then the better we are able to conserve the environment that are left.
02:15And potentially solve a biological mystery millions of years in the making.
02:21Aaron Sheehan
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