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Speciation: the origin of species

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Number estimated: 5-6 million to 100 million. ... Goldschmitian idea: saltation: rapid, big effects from small changes in developmental pathways. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Speciation: the origin of species


1
  • Speciation the origin of species
  • How many species?
  • Number described 1.5 1.6 million
  • Number estimated 5-6 million to 100 million.
  • Species smallest evolutionarily independent unit
    (fundamental unit of biodiversity).
  • Species boundaries
  • geographical
  • genetic
  • How do species originate?
  • Speciation mechanisms

2
Speciation mechanisms 1. Polyploidization A.
Autoploidy doubling of homologous chromosomes B.
Alloploidy stage in the speciation
process Plants
Nicotiana
Alloploidy
Autoploidy
n 96
3
  • 1. Polyploidization
  • Animals
  • Occasionally produces a new
  • species

Hybridization Reticulate evolution
4
  • Speciation Mechanisms
  • Most animal speciation is visualized as lineage
    splitting.
  • Y
  • Basic speciation models require separation of
    gene pools.
  • Darwinian idea slow accumulation of genetic
    differences.
  • Goldschmitian idea saltation rapid, big effects
    from small changes in developmental pathways.
  • 1. Dispersal either setting up peripheral
    isolates or island hopping.
  • 2. Vicariance population is subdivided by
    extraneous geological or climatic events.
  • 3. Habitat segregation

typically messy
5
(No Transcript)
6
DNA sequence divergence Morphological differences
Reproductive isolation
Snapping shrimp species
Speciation by Vicariance Asynchronous closure (3
mya)
7
How many species of African elephants?
Sample 195 elephants from 21 populations Four
genes sequenced genetic distances used to
construct a phylogeny Conservation
implications Two species (using a phylogenetic
species concept)
8
Sympatric Speciation
  • Flies (Rhagoletis pomonella)
  • (1) Larvae develop in hawthorns (Crataegus)
  • Native to NE U.S.
  • (2) Larvae develop in apples (Pyrus)
  • Apples introduced c. 300 ya
  • H0 The flies belong to the same species there
    is phenotypic plasticity in use of hosts.
  • H1 Speciation has occurred each species of fly
    adapted to one host species.
  • Since hawthorns and apples are both within the
    range of Rhagoletis, this would represent an
    example of sympatric speciation.

9
  • Flies using the two types of fruit cannot be
    distinguished morphologically (cryptic).
  • But, evidence of lineage splitting
  • 1. Allele frequency differs for 6 different
    proteins therefore can be distinguished
    genetically.
  • 2. Flies imprint on fruit from which they
    developed.
  • Mating takes place on the fruit.
  • Provides some degree of physical segregation.
  • Only c. 6 of matings are between misimprinted
    flies.

10
  • Flies are diverging because of natural selection
  • Selective agent timing of fruit ripening.
  • Apples ripen early.
  • Larvae in apples
  • Selected to develop slowly.
  • Prevents emergence of adults prior to winter.
  • Hawthorns ripen 3 weeks later.
  • Larvae in hawthorn fruit
  • Selected to develop rapidly.
  • Enables pupation prior to winter.
  • Appears to be speciation nearing completion.

11
Speciation by Dispersal
Representative Hawaiian Drosophila diversity
12
Speciation problem
Aspidoscelis carmenensis
A. picta
A. danheimae
A. franciscensis
A. espiritensis
13
Grismer, L. Lee. 1999. Phylogeny, taxonomy, and
biogeography of Cnemidophorus hyperythrus and C.
ceralbensis (Squamata Teiidae) In Baja
California, Mexico
Unresolved maybe not species?
14
226 specimens scored for 9 phenotypic
characters Canonical variate analysis (pair-wise
F-values) Pair-wise F-values converted to
Mahalanobis distances (D2) Additive tree
constructed from a matrix of D2
15
Speciation nearing completion? Northwest
Arizona Aspidoscelis tigris
16
Sample 4 in the middle of a step
cline. Phenotypically intermediate. Why?
center
17
Assortative mating?
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