280 likes | 295 Views
16. The Origin of Species. 0. 16.1 What Is a Species?. Each species evolves independently Today, a species is defined as a group of populations that evolves independently
E N D
16 The Originof Species 0
16.1 What Is a Species? • Each species evolves independently • Today, a species is defined as a group of populations that evolves independently • Each species follows a separate evolutionary path because alleles rarely move between the gene pools of different species
16.1 What Is a Species? • Each species evolves independently (continued) • The biological species concept is based on the observation that reproductive isolation (inability to successfully breed outside the group) ensures evolutionary independence
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Traits that prevent interbreeding and maintain reproductive isolation are called isolating mechanisms • The benefit of isolating mechanisms is the production of no offspring that are unfit or sterile • Isolating mechanisms prevent the wasting of reproductive effort and failing to contribute to future generations • Natural selection favors traits that prevent reproduction across species boundaries
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms prevent mating between species
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Members of different species may be prevented from meeting • Geographical isolation prevents interbreeding between populations that do not come into contact because they live in different, physically separated places
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Members of different species may be prevented from meeting (continued) • This type of isolation is usually considered to be a mechanism that allows new species to form rather than one that maintains reproductive isolation between species • (Albert moved into Grand Canyon area and made the Kaibab)
Figure 16-3 Geographic isolation Kaibab squirrel Abert squirrel
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may occupy different habitats • Ecological isolation occurs when species do not mate because they occupy different habitats • White-crowned sparrows inhabit fields and meadows, while white-throated sparrows inhabit dense thickets
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Ecological isolation occurs when species do not mate because they occupy different habitats (continued) • In another example, each species of fig wasp breeds in the fruit of a different species of fig, and the wasps thus do not come into contact with one another
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may breed at different times • Temporal isolation (time-based isolation) prevents breeding between two species occupying the same habitat because of different breeding seasons • The spring field cricket and the fall field cricket both occur in many areas of North America • They are unable to interbreed because of their varying breeding seasons
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may breed at different times (continued) • In nature, Bishop pines and Monterey pines do not interbreed • Bishop pine pollination occurs in summer • Monterey pine pollination occurs in early spring
Figure 16-5 Temporal isolation Bishop pine Monterey pine
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may have different courtship signals • Among animals, elaborate courtship colors and behaviors can prevent mating between species • Behavioral isolation is created by signals and behaviors that differ from species to species
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may have different courtship signals (continued) • The plumes and arresting pose of a courting male Raggiana bird of paradise are conspicuous indicators of this species • There is little chance females of another species will mate with him by mistake
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Different species may have different courtship signals (continued) • Male frogs embrace any female regardless of species • Female frogs encountering males of a different species utter the “release call,” which causes the males to let go • As a result, few hybrids—offspring of parents of different species—are produced
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Differing sexual organs may foil mating attempts • In animals with internal fertilization, male and female sexual organs may not fit together • Incompatible body shapes may make copulation between species impossible • For example, snails of species whose shells have left-handed spirals may be unable to copulate successfully with snails whose shells have right-handed spirals
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Premating isolating mechanisms include the following (continued) • Differing sexual organs may foil mating attempts (continued) • In plants, differences in flower size or structure may attract different pollinators • Mechanical incompatibility occurs when species cannot mate because their reproductive structures are incompatible
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • If the resulting offspring die during development, the two species remain reproductively isolated from each other • Mechanisms that prevent the formation of vigorous, fertile hybrids between species are called postmating isolating mechanisms
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • One species’ sperm may fail to fertilize another species’ egg • Gametic incompatibility occurs when sperm from one species cannot fertilize eggs of another • In animals with internal fertilization, fluids of the female reproductive tract may weaken or kill sperm of another species
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • One species’ sperm may fail to fertilize another species’ egg (continued) • Gametic incompatibility may be an especially important isolating mechanism in certain species • Marine invertebrates and wind-pollinated plants reproduce by scattering gametes in the water or in the air
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • One species’ sperm may fail to fertilize another species’ egg (continued) • Among plants, chemical incompatibility may prevent the germination of pollen from one species that lands on the stigma (pollen-catching structure) of the flower of another species
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • Hybrid offspring may fail to survive or reproduce • If cross-species fertilization occurs, the resulting hybrid may be unable to survive, a situation called hybrid inviability
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • Hybrid offspring may fail to survive or reproduce (continued) • The genetic instructions directing development of the two species may be so different that hybrids abort early in development • The hybrid may abort early in development or die shortly after birth
16.2 How Is Reproductive Isolation Between Species Maintained? • Postmating isolating mechanisms limit hybrid offspring (continued) • Hybrid offspring may be infertile • Mule hybrids (a cross between a horse and a donkey) are sterile • Liger hybrids (a zoo-based cross between a male lion and a female tiger) are sterile • Hybrid infertility prevents hybrids from passing on their genetic material to offspring, thus blocking gene flow between the two parent populations