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The Origin of Species

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The Origin of Species Chapter 24 Origin of Species How do we define species? A population of organisms that produces viable fertile offspring in nature. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Origin of Species


1
The Origin of Species
  • Chapter 24

2
Origin of Species
  • How do we define species?
  • A population of organisms that produces viable
    fertile offspring in nature.
  • When does this definition fall apart?
  • Asexual, extinct and blurred organisms
  • What definition is used in these cases?
  • Biological species concept

3
  • What is the main distinction that must occur for
    the origin and integrity of distinct species?
  • Reproductive isolation

4
Prezygotic barriers
  • Habitat isolation
  • Temporal isolation
  • Behavioral isolation
  • Mechanical isolation
  • Gametic isolation

5
Postzygotic barriers
  • Reduced hybrid viability
  • Reduced hybrid fertility
  • Hybrid breakdown

6
  • Which sort of reproductive isolation mechanism is
    at work in the following examples?
  • Firefly signals with specific flashes to attract
    mates
  • Male dragonfly has appendages that clasps female
    during mating
  • Brown trout breed in the fall and rainbow trout
    in the fall
  • 1 type of garter snake lives in the water and the
    other lives on land
  • Horse and donkey produce sterile mule
  • Frogs that mate and produce offspring that do not
    quite develop

7
Biogeography of Speciation
  • What is the difference between allopatric and
    sympatric speciation?
  • Allopatric speciation involves a geographical
    barrier between 2 groups
  • Sympatric speciation is the result of a genetic
    isolation without a geographical barrier

8
Conditions for Allopatry
  • Peripheral isolate where the fringe organisms are
    already somewhat different from mainstream
    population
  • Genetic drift can occur to a small peripheral
    isolate
  • The genetic drift continues to change the gene
    pool until the group is large
  • Natural selection will select the best fit traits
    among the new group to survive

9
Sympatric Speciation
  • Genetic alterations result in a reproductive
    barrier
  • Can occur in a single generation
  • More frequently seen in plants
  • Nondisjunction and selfing leads to polyploidy
  • autopolyploid
  • allopolyploid
  • Evolution of wheat

10
Genetic Mechanisms of Speciation
  • Adaptive Divergence
  • Reproductive barriers evolve as secondary result
    of divergence
  • The barriers evolve to enhance reproduction
    within the group not to eliminate reproduction
    between groups
  • Reproductive barriers occur as a side effect of
    the accumulated adaptive divergences

11
Hybrid zones
  • Secondary contact between 2 related populations
  • Reproductive isolation is broken only in this
    hybrid zone
  • Are the 2 populations really distinct from one
    another when there exists a hybrid zone?
  • Reinforcement- strengthening reproductive
    barriers
  • Fusion-weakening reproductive barriers
  • Stability-continued formation of hybrid
    individuals

12
Tempo of Speciation
  • Gradualism
  • Punctuated Equilibrium

13
Origin of Novelties
  • How do large scale novelties arise?
  • Modifications of older structures
  • Evolution, however, is not goal oriented

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Allopatric and Sympatric Speciation
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