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Intergradation

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In zoology, whenever contact between a geographically isolated population is reestablished with the main body of the species or with another isolate, interbreeding will take place as long as the isolate has not yet evolved an effective set of isolating mechanisms. Consequently, a relatively distinct belt of hybridization, or zone of secondary integration, will develop depending on the degree of genetic and phenotypic difference achieved by the previously isolated populations.[1]

References

  1. ^ Mayr E, Ashlock PD. 1991. Principles of Systematic Zoology. Second edition. McGraw-Hill, Inc. 475 pp. ISBN 0-07-041144-1.