The subject of sympatric speciation periodically pops up in birding 
circles ...
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/315/5817/1420
Ecological Speciation in South Atlantic Island Finches
 Peter G. Ryan, Paulette Bloomer, Coleen L. Moloney, Tyron J. Grant, 
Wayne Delport
Science 9 March 2007: Vol. 315. no. 5817, pp. 1420 - 1423
 Examples of sympatric speciation in nature are rare and hotly debated. 
We describe the parallel speciation of finches on two small islands in 
the Tristan da Cunha archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean. Nesospiza 
buntings are a classic example of a simple adaptive radiation, with two 
species on each island: an abundant small-billed dietary generalist and 
a scarce large-billed specialist. Their morphological diversity closely 
matches the available spectrum of seed sizes, and genetic evidence 
suggests that they evolved independently on each island. Speciation is 
complete on the smaller island, where there is a single habitat with 
strongly bimodal seed size abundance, but is incomplete on the larger 
island, where a greater diversity of habitats has resulted in three 
lineages. Our study suggests that the buntings have undergone parallel 
ecological speciation.
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