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Health & Science1h 59m ago
A new study suggests that migratory predators can act as evolutionary 'messengers', carrying avoidance behavior across continents and linking the fates of species separated by thousands of kilometers.
not applicable (research is theoretical, examples given are general; 'across continents')
Who
Akiva Topper, Dr. Yotam Ben-Oren, and Dr. Oren Kolodny of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
What
A new study suggests that migratory predators can act as evolutionary 'messengers', carrying avoidance behavior across continents and linking the fates of species separated by thousands of kilometers.
When
Mon, 15 Jun 2026 19:14:00 GMT · 1h 59m ago
Where
not applicable (research is theoretical, examples given are general; 'across continents') ·
Why
The research challenges a longstanding assumption in mimicry theory that species must live in the same place to co-evolve.
The Frontline Impact
How this affects you
This new understanding broadens the scope of evolutionary biology, suggesting that species can influence each other's evolutionary paths across vast distances through shared migratory agents, potentially impacting fields such as ecology and conservation.
Story chain
2 events in this thread- Currently Reading1h 59m agoA new study suggests that migratory predators can act as evolutionary 'messengers', carrying avoidance behavior across continents and linking the fates of species separated by thousands of kilometers.
- Health & Science1h 59m agoA new study suggests that migratory predators can act as evolutionary "messengers," linking the fates of species separated by thousands of kilometers.Open article
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