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Speciation and Macroevolution

Speciation and Macroevolution. Chapter 20. Learning Objective 1. What is the biological species concept ? List two potential problems with the concept. Biological Species Concept. Species one or more populations members interbreed in nature produce fertile offspring

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Speciation and Macroevolution

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  1. Speciation and Macroevolution Chapter 20

  2. Learning Objective 1 • What is the biological species concept? • List two potential problems with the concept

  3. Biological Species Concept • Species • one or more populations • members interbreed in nature • produce fertile offspring • do not interbreed with different species

  4. Sterile Hybrid

  5. Problems • Biological species concept applies only to sexually reproducing organisms • Individuals assigned to different species may occasionally successfully interbreed

  6. KEY CONCEPTS • According to the biological species concept, a species consists of individuals that can successfully interbreed with one another but not with individuals from other species

  7. Learning Objective 2 • What is the significance of reproductive isolating mechanisms? • Distinguish among different prezygotic and postzygotic barriers

  8. Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms • Restrict gene flow between species • Prezygotic barriers • prevent fertilization from taking place • Postzygotic barriers • prevent gene flow after fertilization has taken place (reproductive isolating mechanisms)

  9. Prezygotic Barriers (1) • Temporal isolation • two species reproduce at different times of day, season, or year • Habitat isolation • two closely related species live and breed in different habitats in same geographic area

  10. Temporal Isolation

  11. Fig. 20-2a, p. 430

  12. Fig. 20-2b, p. 430

  13. Wood frog Leopard frog Mating activity March 1 April 1 May 1 Fig. 20-2c, p. 430

  14. Insert “Temporal isolation among cicadas” temporal_isolation.swf

  15. Prezygotic Barriers (2) • Behavioral isolation • distinctive courtship behaviors prevent mating between species • Mechanical isolation • incompatible structural differences in reproductive organs of similar species

  16. Behavioral Isolation

  17. Mechanical Isolation

  18. Prezygotic Barriers (3) • Gametic isolation • gametes from different species are incompatible because of molecular and chemical differences

  19. Postzygotic Barriers (1) • Hybrid inviability • interspecific embryos die during development • Hybrid sterility • prevents interspecific hybrids that survive to adulthood from reproducing successfully

  20. Hybrid Sterility

  21. Postzygotic Barriers (2) • Hybrid breakdown • prevents offspring of hybrids that survive to adulthood and successfully reproduce from reproducing beyond one or a few generations

  22. KEY CONCEPTS • The evolution of different species begins with reproductive isolation, in which two populations are no longer able to interbreed successfully

  23. Insert “Reproductive isolating mechanisms” isolating_mechanisms_m.swf

  24. Explore reproductive isolation by clicking on the figures in ThomsonNOW

  25. Learning Objective 3 • What is allopatric speciation? • Give an example

  26. Allopatric Speciation (1) • Evolution of a new species • from ancestral population • Population becomes geographically isolated from rest of species • subsequently diverges

  27. Allopatric Speciation (2) • More likely to occur if original isolated population is small • makes genetic drift more significant • Examples: • Death Valley pupfishes • Kaibab squirrels • Porto Santo rabbits

  28. Allopatric Speciation

  29. KEY CONCEPTS • In allopatric speciation, populations diverge into different species due to geographic isolation, or physical separation

  30. Insert “Allopatric speciation on an archipelago” archipelago.swf

  31. Explore allopatric speciation by clicking on the figures in ThomsonNOW.

  32. Learning Objective 4 • What is sympatric speciation? • Give plant and animal examples

  33. Sympatric Speciation • Does not require geographic isolation • More common in plants than animals

  34. Sympatric Speciation in Plants • Usually results from allopolyploidy • polyploid individual (>2 sets of chromosomes) is hybrid derived from two species • Examples: • kew primroses • hemp nettles

  35. Allopolyploidy in Plants

  36. Species A Species B 2 n = 6 2 n = 4 P generation n = 2 n = 3 Gametes Hybrid AB F1 generation Fig. 20-9a, p. 435

  37. No doubling of chromosome number Doubling of chromosome number 2 n = 10 Chromosomes either cannot pair or go through erratic meiosis Pairing now possible during meiosis n = 5 No gametes or sterile gametes — no sexual reproduction possible Viable gametes — sexual reproduction possible (self-fertilization) Fig. 20-9b, p. 435

  38. Species A Species B 2 n = 4 2 n = 6 P generation n = 2 n = 3 Gametes Hybrid AB F1 generation No doubling of chromosome number Doubling of chromosome number 2 n = 10 Chromosomes either cannot pair or go through erratic meiosis Pairing now possible during meiosis n = 5 No gametes or sterile gametes — no sexual reproduction possible Viable gametes — sexual reproduction possible (self-fertilization) Stepped Art Fig. 20-9b, p. 435

  39. Sympatric Speciation

  40. Sympatric Speciation in Animals • Fruit maggot flies

  41. Sympatric Speciation in Animals • Cichlids

  42. Fig. 20-12a, p. 437

  43. Fig. 20-12b, p. 437

  44. Fig. 20-12c, p. 437

  45. KEY CONCEPTS • In sympatric speciation, populations become reproductively isolated from one another despite living in the same geographic area

  46. Insert “Sympatric speciation in wheat” wheat_speciation.swf

  47. Explore sympatric speciation by clicking on the figure in ThomsonNOW.

  48. Learning Objective 5 • Debate the pace of evolution by representing the views of either punctuated equilibrium or gradualism

  49. Evolution • Punctuated equilibrium model • evolution proceeds in spurts • short periods of active speciation interspersed with long periods of stasis • Gradualism model • populations slowly diverge from one another by accumulation of adaptive characteristics

  50. Punctuated Equilibrium and Gradualism

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