Speciation is about how species form. It is a major part of evolutionary biology.
Darwin thought most species came directly from pre-existing species. This is called anagenesis: species by changing, or 'phyletic evolution'. For much of the 20th century, scientists thought most species came when earlier species split. This is called cladogenesis.[1][2] The general view was that most species splitting is caused or helped on its way by isolating mechanisms.[3][4]
No doubt the physical separation of species which once lived together is a main factor. It is illustrated by so many examples, some of which are discussed below.
However, work in the last 20 years has shown some other causes. Analysing the DNA sequence of living things has shown that there is often some hybridisation between related species. That means genes have been transferred by these crosses. In turn, that means reproductive isolation is not the only definition of a species, and speciation does not always need allopatry (species to be reproductively separated).[5][6][7] The sections below illustrate the idea that physical separation was of prime importance in the formation of new species.