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Speciation

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Title: Speciation


1
Speciation
  • Chapter 18 19
  • BIO 21 SJCC

2
  • Species Concept
  • What is a species?
  • Species are groups of actually or potentially
    interbreeding natural populations which are
    reproductively isolated from other such groups
    Ernst Mayr
  • Speciation process of new species arising
    through evolutionary processes
  • What happens during evolution?
  • In order for speciation to occur what must happen
    to an existing species?

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4
  • Isolating Mechanisms

5
  • By definition speciation involves reproductive
    isolation
  • Reproductive isolating mechanisms are the
    barriers that prevent genetic exchange between
    species
  • Prezygotic isolating mechanisms
  • Prevent the formation of zygotes
  • Postzygotic isolating mechanisms
  • Prevent the proper functioning of zygotes after
    they have formed

6
  • Prezygotic Mechanisms
  • Allopatric speciation spatial isolation
    geographic isolation
  • Spread of species into new areas
  • Founding population in isolated location
  • Geologic changes gradual process
  • Sympatric speciation different niches/same
    habitat or geographic area
  • Genetic changes (as ploidy levels in plants)
  • Disruptive selection divergent genotypes favored

7
Live in forest
Live in open grassland
Tiglon
  • Hybridization has been successful in captivity
  • But it does not occur in the wild

8
When DoesSpeciation Occur?
  • Generalists example Horseshoe crabs
  • Already adapted to various food sources no
    change necessary/do not evolve or speciate
  • Specialists finches narrowly adapted to food
    resources and highly evolved
  • Gene pool shifts in response to changing food
    resources

9
  • Adaptive Radiation a form of sympatric
    speciation
  • Single ancestral from give rise to multiple
    specialist forms filling various niches

10
Postzygotic Mechanisms
  • Zygotic mortality
  • Hybrid inviability
  • Hybrid sterility

11
Postzygotic Isolating Mechanisms
  • Zygotic mortality
  • Hybrid inviability
  • Hybrid sterility
  • Examples
  • Hybridization between sheep and goats produces
    embryos that die in the earliest embryonic stages
  • Leopard frogs of the United States are a group of
    similar species, and NOT a single species as was
    long assumed

12
  • Hybrids between them produced defective embryos
    in the lab
  • Their mating calls also differ substantially

13
Speciation by Polyploidy
Instant speciation
  • Change in chromosome number (3n, 4n, etc.)
  • Offspring with altered chromosome number cannot
    breed with parent population
  • Common mechanism of speciation in flowering plants

14
Polyploid Speciation
15
Possible Evolution of Wheat
Figure 18.9Page 299
T. aestivum (one of the common bread wheats)
Triticum monococcum (einkorn)
T. tauschii (a wild relative)
Unknown species of wild wheat
T. turgidum (wild emmer)
42AABBDD
14AA
14BB
14AB
28AABB
14DD
X
X
cross-fertilization, followed by a spontaneous
chromosome doubling
Figure 18.9Page 299
16
Parapatric Speciation
  • Adjacent populations evolve into distinct
    species while maintaining contact along a common
    border

BULLOCKS ORIOLE
BALTIMORE ORIOLE
HYBRID ZONE
17
  • Geographic Isolation of Ensatina escholtzii
    populations in CA
  • ring species geographically isolated
    populations surround uninhabitable area
  • Adjacent populations can interbreed
  • Reproductively incompatible at extremes (black)

18
Gradual Model
  • Speciation model in which species emerge through
    many small morphological changes that accumulate
    over a long time period
  • Fits well with evidence from certain lineages in
    fossil record

19
Punctuation Model
  • Speciation model in which most changes in
    morphology are compressed into brief period near
    onset of divergence
  • Supported by fossil evidence in some lineages

20
  • Speciation is a two-part process
  • 1. Identical populations must diverge
  • 2. Reproductive isolation must evolve to
    maintain these differences
  • Speciation occurs much more readily in the
    absence of gene flow
  • This much more likely in geographically isolated
    populations

21
Convergent evolution many paths to one goal
22
  • Analogous structures and Convergent Evolution
  • Analogous Structures
  • Resemble each other
  • result of parallel evolutionary adaptations
    Example Wings of Bird and Wings of Butterfly
  • Convergent Evolution
  • Different animal groups adapt in different ways
    to solve same problem

23
  • Patterns of Evolution How and why do new
    species develop?
  • Changes in gene pool
  • Gene pool all the genotypes within a population
  • All the different alleles present
  • Changes in allele frequency ? changes in
    appearance of the species

24
Extinction
  • Irrevocable loss of a species
  • Mass extinctions have played a major role in
    evolutionary history
  • Fossil record shows 20 or more large-scale
    extinctions
  • Reduced diversity is followed by adaptive
    radiation

25
How do we classify things?Linnaean Classification
  • Kingdom
  • Phylum
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species
  • Kings Play Chess On Fine Grained Sand
  • In order from most inclusive to most specific

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Species Names
  • By convention, the binomial name consists
  • Genus name
  • The first word and is always capitalized
  • Species grouping
  • The second word which refers to the species and
    is not capitalized
  • The two words are written in italics
  • Together, they form the scientific name
  • Example Apis mellifera

The honeybee
28
A cladogram of vertebrate animals
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