Title: The Origin of Species How species emerge
1The Origin of Species How species emerge
2Introduction
- The beginning of new forms of life the origin
of species - is the focal point of evolution
- It is the creation of new species that leads to
diversity
- Cant just explain how adaptations evolve in
populations (microevo.)
- Evolutionary theory must explain MACROEVOLUTION.
3Some Terms
- Macroevolution the origin of new taxonomic
groups (new species, genera, families,
kingdoms).
- Speciation origin of new species. The keystone
process because any higher taxon (genus, family,
etc.) originates with a new species that is
different enough to be the first member of a new
taxon
4Two Main Processes in Speciation
- Revealed by fossil record
- Anagenesis accumulation of changes that
transforms one species into another
- Cladogenesis branching evolution building of
one or more species from a parent species that
continues to exist. Only this type promotes
diversity increases number of species.
5What is a Species?
- Biological Species Concept
- Population or group of populations whose members
have the potential to interbreed in nature to
produce fertile, viable offspring.
- Cannot produce fertile, viable offspring with
members of another species.
- Exception to rule stems from species being
defined in natural environments.
- In labs and zoos some fertile hybrids CAN be
produced, but species would NOT interbreed in
nature.
6What is a Species?
- Biological species concept is based on fertility
rather than physical similarity.
- Eastern and western meadowlarks appear similar,
but represent different species because they do
not interbreed in nature.
- Humans seem diverse, but belong to one species
because we can interbreed.
7What is a Species?
- Biological species concept hinges on reproductive
isolation.
- Thus, there must be BARRIERS that isolate the
gene pools of biological species.
8Reproductive Barriers
- Barriers to reproduction lead to reproductive
isolation between species.
- No single barrier may completely isolate one
species from another, but many species are
separated by more than one reproductive barrier.
9What Makes a Reproductive Barrier?
- Only biological barriers to reproduction are
considered
- That means barriers that are INTRINSIC to the
organisms involved.
- Geographical barriers dont count.
- Obviously, if two species are geographically
separated, they cannot interbreed.
- Reproductive isolation, however, prevents
different species from interbreeding even if
their ranges overlap.
102 Main Types of Repro. Barriers
- Prezygotic reproductive barriers
- Prevent mating between species OR
- Prevent fertilization of egg if mating does
occur
- Postzygotic reproductive barriers
- IF fertilization does occur between species,
these barriers prevent the fertilized egg from
developing into a viable fertile adult
11Prezygotic Barriers
- Habitat isolation
- Two species may live in the same geographic area,
but in different habitats and thus encounter each
other rarely.
- Example Garter snakes from the genus
Thamnophis occur in the same area, but one lives
in water while the other is terrestrial.
- Parasites, while living in the same geographic
area are often confined to different hosts.
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13Prezygotic Barriers
- Behavioral isolation
- Signals and rituals that attract mates and are
unique to a species.
- May be most important barrier in species that are
closely related.
- Example fireflies of different species attract
mates by blinking their lights in particular
patterns
14Prezygotic Barriers
- Behavioral isolation, continued
- Example Eastern and Western Meadowlarks
- Nearly identical in shape coloration, habitat and
ranges overlap.
- Remain separate species because of difference in
songs that allow them to recognize individuals of
their own kind
15Prezygotic Barriers
- Behavioral isolation, cont.
- Example Courtship rituals are specific to
species.
- Blue-footed boobies will mate only after a
specific ritual of courtship displays
- Part of the ritual calls for the male to
high-step which advertises his bright blue feet
to the female.
16Prezygotic Barriers
- Temporal isolation
- two species that breed during different times of
day, different seasons, or different years cannot
mix their gametes.
- Example Western and Easter spotted skunk ranges
overlap, but one mates in late summer and the
other in late winter
- Example 3 similar orchid species (genus
Dendrobium) in the same rain forest do not
hybridize because they flower on different days.
Pollination is limited to only ONE day because
flowers open in the morning and wither that
evening.
17Prezygotic Barriers
- Mechanical isolation
- Closely related species may attempt to mate, but
fail because they are anatomically incompatible.
- Common among flowering plants pollinated by
specific insects or other animals.
- floral anatomy is often adapted to certain
pollinators that transfer pollen only among
plants of the same species.
18Bird Pollinated Flowers
Bird Beak Shape
Flower
egg
19Bird Pollinated Flowers
Bird Beak Shape
Flower
egg
20Prezygotic Barriers
- Gametic isolation Even mating occurs, sperm and
egg rarely fuse to form a zygote.
- Sperm of different species often cannot survive
in female reproductive tract long enough to
fertilize egg.
- Gamete recognition - likely based on the presence
of specific molecules on the coats around the egg
which adhere only to complementary molecules on
the sperm of the same species. - This is often the case with flowers. They can
discriminate between pollen of same and different
species.
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23Postzygotic Barriers
- Reduced Hybrid Viability
- IF hybrid zygotes form, genetic incompatibility
may abort development of the hybrid at some
embryonic stage.
- Example Frogs of genus Rana are often in same
regions and habitats and occasionally hybridize.
- Hybrids do not usually complete development. If
they do they are frail.
24Postzygotic Barriers
- Reduced Hybrid Fertility Even if two species
mate and produce a hybrid offspring, isolation
remains in tact if that offspring is infertile.
- One cause is failure of meiosis to produce normal
gametes in the hybrid offspring if the two
parents have chromosomes of different number or
structure. - Example Horse Donkey Mule
25Postzygotic Barriers
- Hybrid Breakdown
- First generation of hybrids viable and fertile.
- When hybrids mate with each other or with parent
species the next generation is feeble or
sterile.
- Example Different cotton species can produce
fertile hybrids, but breakdown occurs in the next
generation
- Offspring of hybrids die as seeds or grow into
week and defective plants.
26Summary of Reproductive Barriers
27Biological Species Concept Doesnt Always Work
- Extinct life forms
- Fossils must be classified according to
morphology
- Asexual life forms
- Even some sexual life forms
- Coyotes can interbreed with wolves and dogs, yet
all three remain distinct.
- Certain groups of subspecies may not directly
breed with each other, but their genes may get
passed to each other by breeding with other
subspecies that do breed with each other.
28Alternative Species Concepts other ways of
defining species
- Biological species concept already discussed.
Emphasizes reproductive isolation
- Morphological species measurable anatomical
differences. Most species already classified
were classified by this method.
- Recognition species concept
- Cohesion species concept
- Ecological species concept emphasizes species
niches in environment
- Evolutionary species concept emphasizes
evolutionary lineages and ecological roles.
29Modes of Speciation
- There are two main ways that speciation occurs.
- These modes are based on how gene flow between
populations is interrupted.
- Allopatric speciation some geographical barrier
physically isolates populations and initially
blocks gene flow.
- Sympatric speciation involves some factor
intrinsic to the organism altering gene flow
between populations. The populations become
isolated even though their ranges overlap. - Chromosomal changes
- Nonrandom mating
302 Modes of Speciation
31Allopatric Speciation
- Geographical barriers
- mountain range emerges and gradually splits a
population.
- Land bridge (Isthmus of Panama) may form and
separate marine life on either side.
- Creeping glacier may divide a population
- If individuals colonize a new isolated area, the
colonizing population may become isolated from
the parent population
32Allopatric Speciation - Example
- A geographical feature that is a barrier to one
species may not be to some other.
- Grand Canyon is easily crossed by hawks, but is
impossible for small rodents to cross.
33Allopatric Speciation - Example
- Another example Death Valley Pupfish
- Death valley was once rainy and had a system of
interconnected lakes and rivers
- Drying trend began 10,000 years ago
- Left only isolated springs that vary in temp and
salinity no more than a few meters across.
34- In these springs live pupfishes
- Each spring has its own species found no where
else.
- Various pupfishes probably descended from one
ancestor whose range was broken up when the
region became arid.
- Once separated, the ancestral populations
diverged from each other to create all the
species found today.
35Allopatric Speciation Favorable Conditions
- Conditions that favor allopatric speciation
- an isolated population that is small is more
likely than a large population to change enough
to become a new species.
- In fact, geographical isolation of a small pop.
usually occurs at the fringe of the parent
population. WHY?
36Allopatric Speciation Fringe Populations
- Why fringe populations are more likely to undergo
allopatric speciation
- Gene pool of the fringe population probably
differs from that of the parent population from
the outset.
- Living near the border of the range means the
population represents the extremes of any clines
that were present
37Allopatric Speciation Fringe Populations
- Why fringe populations are more likely to undergo
allopatric speciation
- If fringe population is small, founder effect
comes into play.
- May cause neutral variation to become fixed by
chance.
- Causes divergence from parent population.
38Allopatric Speciation Fringe Populations
- Why fringe populations are more likely to undergo
allopatric speciation
- Differences in Natural Selection Factors
- Because it inhabits a frontier, the fringe
environment is somewhat different from the
parents. The fringe population will probably
encounter selection factors different from those
affecting the parent population.
39Allopatric Speciation Success of Fringe
Populations
- Just because a fringe population gets isolated,
doesnt mean it will survive to become a new
species
- a fringe species has a lottery ticket
- Lots of lottery tickets get issued, but only a
few win. Stephen Jay Gould
40Allopatric Speciation - Islands
- Islands are HUGELY important in the study of
speciation.
- Organisms stray from parent populations and found
new populations on different islands that evolve
in isolation.
41Allopatric Speciation - Islands
- Example Galapagos Finches
- single dispersal event may have brought a small
population of ancestral finches to one island
- This fringe population formed a new species
- A few individuals of this island species may have
reached neighboring islands where geographical
isolation permitted additional speciation
episodes. - After diverging on a different island, a new
species could even recolonize the original island
and coexist with the parent species.
42Allopatric Speciation - Islands
43Allopatric Speciation - Islands
- ADAPTIVE RADIATION evolution of many diversely
adapted species from a common ancestor.
44Sympatric Speciation
- New species arise within the range of parent
population
- How can reproductive isolation occur without
separation of species geographically?
- Example a new species can be generated in a
single generation if a genetic change results in
a reproductive barrier between the mutants and
the parent population.
45Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- Polyploidy
- accident during cell division that results in an
extra set of chromosomes
- Two ways that polyploidy can occur
- Autopolyploid arise from a single species
- Allopolyploid arise from two different species
46Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- Types of Polyploidy
- Autoploidy
- An autopolyploid is an individual that has more
than two chromosome sets, all derived from a
single species
- Failure of meiosis during gamete production can
double chromosome number from the diploid count
2n to 4n
- The tetraploid that results can then fertilize
itself or mate with other tetraploids
- It CANNOT mate with parents because offspring
would be 3n and sterile because unpaired
chromosomes result in abnormal meiosis
- Thus, reproductive isolation is achieved.
- Common in PLANTS.
47Causes of Sympatric Speciation
48Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- Polyploidy
- Allopolyploid
- More common than autopolyploid condition
- Results when TWO different species combine their
chromosomes.
- Hybrid offspring usually sterile
- Haploid set from one parent cannot pair during
meiosis with haploid set from second parent.
- However, hybrid may be more vigorous than its
parents AND propagate asexually
- AND there are mechanisms that can transform
sterile hybrids to fertile polyploids!
49Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- More on Allopolyploids
- Especially vigorous
- Combine best qualities of both parents?
- Speciation of polyploids (allopolyploids
especially) accounts for 25-50 of plant
species!
50Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- Example of Allopolyploid
- New species of salt-marsh grass in England
- Derived from
- European sp. (Spartina maritima)
- American sp. (Spartina alternaflora)
- Invasive American sp. hybridized with European
sp.
51Causes of Sympatric Speciation
- Results of marsh grass allpolyploidy
- A third species (Spartina anglica) arose from the
two different parent species
- Chromosome numbers are consistent with
allopolyploid origin
- S.maritima, 2n 60
- S. alternaflora, 2n 62
- S. anglica, 2n 122
- New species is very successful and has become
somewhat of a pest.
52More Plant Polyploids
- Oats
- Cotton
- Potatoes
- Tobacco
- Wheat
- Scientists work to create more plant polyploids
with desirable traits.
53Sympatric Speciation in Animals
- Sympatric speciation may occur in animals, though
mechanisms are different than the c-some
doublings of plants.
54Sympatric Speciation in Animals
- Conditions required
- Genetic factors cause a population within a
parent population to become fixed on some
resource(s) not used by the parent population.
55Sympatric Speciation in Animals
- Example of Sympatric Speciation in Animals
Wasps that pollinate figs
- Each fig species is pollinated by a different
species of wasp
56Sympatric Speciation in Animals
- Fig Wasps, cont.
- Wasp mates and lays eggs in figs
- Genetic change that caused wasp to select a
different fig would segregate mating individuals
of this group from the parent population sets
stage for divergence.
57How Fast is Speciation?
- Traditional view Gradualism
- Speciation is the product of gradual divergence
over a long span of time.
- Problem
- Gradual transitions of fossils seldom found.
- Instead, species tend to
- appear as new forms suddenly
- Persist unchanged for their time on Earth
- Disappear from fossil record as suddenly as
they came
58How Fast is Speciation?
- Punctuated Equilibrium
- Addresses the nongradual appearance of species in
fossil record.
- Says species diverge in spurts of relatively
rapid change NOT slowly and gradually
- Remember, we are talking rapid in geologic time
terms!
59How Fast is Speciation?
60The Origin of Evolutionary Novelty
- What processes cause large-scale evolutionary
changes?
- Ex. Flight adaptations of birds?
- Progressive changes like increased brain size
during human evolution
61Most Evolutionary Novelties are Modifications of
Older Structures
- Exaptation a structure that evolved in one
context becomes co-opted for another function
- Example lightweight honeycombed bones in birds
aid in flight
62Birds From Dinosaurs?
- Fossil evidence indicates that birds evolved from
a lineage of earthbound dinosaurs. Exaptation
played a roll.
- These dinosaurs also had lightweight honeycombed
bones
- This feature did not evolve in the
anticipation of flight
- Instead, lightweight bones must have been an
advantage for the original land bound dinosaurs.
- Made them lighter and more agile in catching
prey
- Wing-like forelimbs and feathers are also
observed in fossils of these dinosaurs
- Again, this feature did NOT evolve in
anticipation of flight.
- Instead, winglike forelimbs and feathers must
have been adaptive in some other way perhaps
providing a large surface area for trapping prey
or in courtship display (or both).
63Birds From Dinosaurs?
- The first flights may have been only extended
hops in pursuit of prey or escape from a
predator.
- However, once these hops/flights became an
advantage, natural selection would have remodeled
feathers and wings to better fit this function.
64Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Sometimes just a few changes in the genome of an
organism can result in major structural
modifications.
- Genes that program development of an organism
control the changes in an organisms form as it
goes from zygote to adult. These genes control
- Rate of changes
- Timing of changes
- Spatial patterns of changes
65Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Allometric Growth
- A difference in the relative rates of growth of
various parts of the body
- Helps shape an organism
- If relative growth rates of body parts are
changed even slightly, the adult form is changed
substantially.
66Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Allometric Growth Example
- Different allometric patterns contribute to the
contrasting shapes of human and chimpanzee
skulls
- Thus, a small change in some developmental genes
causes profound changes in the adult organism.
67Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Genetic changes can also alter timing of
developmental events This is called
Heterochrony
- Example - Paedomorphosis
- In some species, a sexually mature adult retains
features that were juvenile structures in its
ancestors
- Some salamanders retain gills and other juvenile
features in the sexually mature adult form
- This small genetic change in developmental timing
results in an a very different adult form.
68Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Another example of Heterochrony
- Human brain is proportionately larger than the
chimpanzee brain
- This is because the growth of the brain in a
human is switched off much later in a human
than in a chimpanzee
69Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Homeosis
- Alteration in the basic body design or spatial
arrangement of body parts.
- Homeotic genes
- Relatively small sets of genes that function as
developmental master switches
70Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- Example of Homeotic Genes
- Homeotic genes initiate developmental events that
determine such basic features as where a pair of
wings and a pair of legs will develop on a bird.
- Mutations in homeotic genes create drastic
changes in the body plan of an organism
71Genes that Control Development Play a Major Role
in Evolutionary Novelty
- The Hox complex
- A duplication of a cluster of homeotic genes
(called the Hox complex) that occurred about 520
million years ago may have been the event that
caused the rise of vertebrates - Vertebrates have multiple sets of the homeotic
genes in this complex while invertebrates only
have a single cluster of the Hox complex genes.
72Vertebrate Evolution an Hox genes
73Evolution as a bush, not a tree
74Evolution is not goal oriented
- Species as individuals
- Birth speciation
- Death extinction
- Offspring new species
- The longer lived a species, the more new species
will arise from it and have more influence on
major evolutionary trends
- HOWEVER, the appearance of a trend should not be
interpreted as a drive toward some particular
phenotype.
75Evolution is not goal oriented
- Evolution is the result of the interactions
between organisms and their current environment
not some future one.
- If environmental conditions change, an apparent
trend can cease or even reverse itself.