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What is a Species? Speciation and the Maggot Fly by Joan Sharp Simon Fraser University Modified from a case by Martin G. Kelly, Buffalo State College. CQ#1: Speciation can only be observed over millions of years:. True False.
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What is a Species?Speciation and the Maggot Flyby Joan SharpSimon Fraser UniversityModified from a case by Martin G. Kelly, Buffalo State College
CQ#1: Speciation can only be observed over millions of years: • True • False
CQ#2: Species are going extinct, but no new species are forming on Earth: • True • False
A Case Study in Speciation • Hawthorn trees are native to North America. • The hawthorn fruit is eaten by the larvae of the hawthorn maggot fly, Rhagoletis pomonella.
Rhagoletis pomonella lifecycle • The female lays fertilized eggs in the fruit. • Maggots (larvae) emerge from the egg, feed on the fruit, and grow through several molts. • Healthy maggots drop from the tree with the fruit and burrow in the soil. Pupation takes place in the soil. • Adult maggot flies emerge from the soil and fly to fruit trees, where they mate on the surface of the fruit.
But there are parasites! Parasitoid wasps try to lay eggs in the maggot’s body, paralyzing and ultimately killing the maggot.
Hawthorns Hawthorns are native North American shrubs in the genus Crataegus. Hawthorn fruits range between 5 mm and 20 mm in diameter, with an average of 12.6 mm.
Apples • Apples belong to the genus Malus. • Domesticated apples (Malus domesticus) wereintroduced to North American in the 1600s. They are the most widely grown fruit in North America. • A typical commercial apple has a diameter of 70 mm.
Rhagoletis Host Shift When apples were introduced to North America, the larva of Rhagoletis pomonella started feeding on them.
Rhagoletis Host Shift ♀ lays eggs on fruit Hawthorn (Crataegus spp) Apple (Malus domesticus) Rhagoletis pomonella 1864: First noted apple infestation
Apple vs. Hawthorn:The Maggot’s Viewpoint • The large apple fruit provides 220 times more food than hawthorn fruit. • But the nutritional quality of hawthorn fruit is superior: • 52% of hawthorn maggots survive vs. 27% of apple maggots.
Apple vs. Hawthorn: The Risk of Attack • Larger fruits of apples are much deeper than hawthorn fruits. • Apple maggots can burrow to avoid parasitoid wasps. • Apple maggots carry fewer parasitoid wasp eggs than hawthorn maggots do.
Today: There are Hawthorn & Apple Maggot Flies • Hawthorn and apple maggot flies are physically indistinguishable. • However, they are genetically distinct, with different genetic profiles. • There is no geographic isolation or physical separation between hawthorn and apple maggot flies.
Hawthorn & Apple Maggot Flies • Maggot flies tend to mate with their own kind. • Hawthorn maggot flies strongly prefer to mate on and lay fertilized eggs in hawthorn fruit. • Apple maggot flies strongly prefer to mate on and lay fertilized eggs in apple fruit. • There is only a 4-6% hybridization rate between hawthorn and apple maggot flies.
Hybrids are viable and fertile. No post-zygotic barriers Rhagoletis Host Shift Apple-raised Hawthorn-raised
Timing of Host Fruit Ripening Different ripening time of host fruit leads to temporal separation of apple and hawthorn flies.
Rhagoletis Speciation Hawthorn Apple Small fruit (13 mm) Large fruit (70 mm) High nutritional quality Low nutritional quality Shallow burrows Deep burrows More parasitoid wasps Fewer wasps Fruit available later Fruit available early
CQ#3: Based on the information provided in this case study, are hawthorn and apple maggot flies separate species? • Yes • It depends on how the terms “species” is defined • No
CQ#4: According to the biological species concept, are hawthorn and apple maggot flies separate species? • Yes • No • I cannot tell from the information provided
CQ#5: Which information is relevant to the biological species definition? • Hawthorn and apple maggot flies are physically indistinguishable. • There is a 4-6% hybridization rate between hawthorn and apple maggot flies. • Hawthorn and apple maggot flies are genetically distinguishable and have a distinct genetic profiles. • Hawthorn and apple maggot flies strongly prefer to mate and lay fertilized eggs in hawthorns and apples, respectively.
Modes of speciation Allopatric speciation is initiated by a geographic barrier between individuals from two natural populations. Sympatric speciation takes place in a single geographic area.
CQ#6: Speciation in Rhagoletis is: • Sympatric • Allopatric
Reproductive isolation • How do two similar species maintain genetic isolation if they come (or remain) in contact with each other? • Reproductive isolating mechanisms prevent two individuals from distinct species from interbreeding to produce viable and fertile hybrid offspring.
Reproductive isolation: Prezygotic barriers • Habitat isolation • Behavioral isolation • Temporal isolation • Mechanical isolation • Gametic isolation
Reproductive isolation:Postzygotic barriers • Reduced hybrid viability • Reduced hybrid fertility • Hybrid breakdown
CQ#7: When a male donkey mates with a female horse, the hybrid offspring is an infertile mule. This reproductive barrier is: • Prezygotic • Postzygotic
CQ#8: The antennae of male moths can only detect sex pheromones released by a female in his species. This reproductive barrier is: • Prezygotic • Postzygotic
CQ#9: What reproductive barrier limits interbreeding between hawthorn and apple maggot flies? • Mechanical isolation • Habitat isolation • Temporal isolation • Hybrid breakdown
CQ#10: Habitat isolation and temporal isolation are: • Prezygotic reproductive barriers • Postzygotic reproductive barriers
Question Would you expect natural selection to favor pre-zygotic or post-zygotic isolating mechanisms between sympatric species?
Questions for Further Discussion • Are apple and hawthorn maggot flies separate species? • Are they in the process of speciating? • At what point is it reasonable to say that speciation has occurred?