Talk:Ecological speciation

Is nonecological speciation real?
I just added a few putative examples of nonecological speciation that I think help illuminate what's cool about ecological speciation. I'm following this quote from Nosil's 2012 book: "It is useful to consider ecological speciation as its own form of species formation because it focuses on an explicit mechanism of speciation: namely divergent natural selection. There are numerous ways other than via divergent natural selection in which populations might become genetically differentiated and reproductively isolated" p8 I'm currently in the process of making a page for nonadaptive radiations... it might make sense to make a separate page for nonecological speciation at some point Jesseseeem (talk) 22:39, 29 July 2020 (UTC)

Recent expansion
So I finally finished rewriting this article to give it better coverage—it was seriously lacking before. I'm sure it has some typos, so anyone wanting to take the time to make corrections it would be much appreciated. Further, the references probably need a little cleaning-up and formatting. The lead could probably use work as well. Some of the lead could possibly be out into a "Definition" section or something similar. The part about how it has been defined as well as the non-ecology part don't seem to go well in the lead. Thoughts? Andrew Z. Colvin • Talk 14:58, 14 December 2020 (UTC)

Typos
"the environmental conditions that a species lives" (first para, second sentence) needs changing into English. My preference would be "in which a species lives", but I'm no expert on the topic, so there may well be a better formulation. Also, right after that, there's an opening bracket, but no corresponding closing bracket. Again, not an expert, so I'm not entirely sure where the closing bracket should go. Perhaps someone more knowledgeable could correct the two issues? HieronymousCrowley (talk) 07:15, 5 January 2021 (UTC)
 * You’re right. I fixed the prose to more appropriate wording. Andrew Z. Colvin • Talk 02:30, 6 January 2021 (UTC)