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Chapter 17 Processes of Evolution Sections 7-12. 17.7 Fostering Diversity. Individuals may be selective agents for their own species Any mode of natural selection may maintain two or more alleles in a population An allele may be adaptive in one circumstance but harmful in another.
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17.7 Fostering Diversity • Individuals may be selective agents for their own species • Any mode of natural selection may maintain two or more alleles in a population • An allele may be adaptive in one circumstance but harmful in another
Nonrandom Mating • Competition for mates is a selective pressure • With sexual selection, some version of a trait gives an individual an advantage over others in attracting mates • Distinct male and female phenotypes (sexual dimorphism) is one outcome of sexual selection
Balanced Polymorphism • Balanced polymorphism • A state in which natural selection maintains two or more alleles at relatively high frequencies • Occurs when environmental conditions favor heterozygotes • Example: Sickle cell anemia and malaria • Mosquitoes transmit the parasitic protist that causes malaria, Plasmodium, to human hosts • HbA/HbS heterozygotes survive malaria more often than people who make only normal hemoglobin
Take-Home Message: How does natural selection maintain diversity? • With sexual selection, a trait is adaptive if it gives an individual an advantage in securing mates • Sexual selection reinforces phenotypical differences between males and females, and sometimes gives rise to exaggerated traits • Environmental pressures that favor heterozygotes can lead to a balanced polymorphism
18.7 Genetic Drift and Gene Flow • Especially in small populations, random changes in allele frequencies can lead to a loss of genetic diversity • Individuals, along with their alleles, move into and out of populations • This flow of alleles counters genetic change that tends to occur within a population
Genetic Drift • Genetic drift • A random change in allele frequencies over time • Can lead to a loss of genetic diversity, especially in small populations • When all individuals of a population are homozygous for an allele, that allele is fixed
Bottlenecks • Bottleneck • A drastic reduction in population size brought about by severe pressure • After a bottleneck, genetic drift is pronounced when a few individuals rebuild a population • Example: Northern elephant seals
The Founder Effect • Founder effect • Genetic drift is pronounced when a few individuals start a new population • Inbreeding • Breeding or mating between close relatives who share a large number of alleles • Example: Old Order Amish in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (Ellis-van Creveld syndrome)
Gene Flow • Gene flow • Physical movement of alleles caused by individuals moving into and away from populations • Tends to counter the evolutionary effects of mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift on a population • Example: Movement of acorns by blue jays allows gene flow between oak populations
Take-Home Message: How does a population’s genetic diversity become reduced? • Genetic drift, or random change in allele frequencies, can reduce a population’s genetic diversity; its effect is greatest in small populations, such as one that endures a bottleneck • Gene flow is the physical movement of alleles into and out of a population; it tends to counter the evolutionary effects of mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift
ANIMATED FIGURE: Simulation of genetic drift To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
17.9 Reproductive Isolation • Speciation differs in its details, but reproductive isolating mechanisms are always part of the process • Speciation • Evolutionary process by which new species form • Reproductive isolating mechanisms are always part of the process • Reproductive isolation • The end of gene exchange between populations • Beginning of speciation
Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms • Reproductive isolating mechanisms prevent interbreeding among species • Heritable aspects of body form, function, or behavior that arise as populations diverge • Prezygotic isolating mechanisms prevent pollination or mating • Postzygotic isolating mechanisms result in weak or infertile hybrids
Prezygotic Isolating Mechanisms • With temporal isolation populations can’t interbreed because the timing of their reproduction differs • With mechanical isolation, the size or shape of an individual’s reproductive parts prevent it from mating with members of another population
anthers stigma Figure 17-17c p285
Prezygotic Isolating Mechanisms (cont.) • Populations adapted to different microenvironments in the same region may be ecologically isolated • In animals, behavioral differences can stop gene flow between related species (behavioral isolation) • In gamete incompatibility, gametes of different species meet but have molecular incompatibilities that prevent a zygote from forming
Postzygotic Isolation Mechanisms • Hybrid inviability • Extra or missing genes, or incompatible gene products • Offspring may be inviable, or have reduced fitness (ligers, tigons) • Hybrid sterility • Some interspecies crosses produce robust but sterile offspring (e.g. mules) • Fertile offspring may have lower fitness with successive generations
Different species form and . . . Prezygotic reproductive isolation Individuals reproduce at different times (temporal isolation). Physical incompatibilities prevent individuals from interbreeding (mechanical isolation). Individuals live in different places so they never meet up for sex (ecological isolation). Individuals ignore or do not get the required cues for sex (behavioral isolation). Mating occurs and . . . No fertilization occurs (gamete incompatibility). Zygotes form and . . . Postzygotic reproductive isolation Hybrid embryos die early, or new individuals die before they can reproduce (hybrid inviability). Hybrid individuals or their offspring do not make functional gametes (hybrid sterility). Interbreeding is successful Stepped Art Figure 17-16 p284
ANIMATED FIGURE: Reproductive isolating mechanisms To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
Take-Home Message: How do species attain and maintain separate identities? • Speciation is an evolutionary process by which new species form; it varies in its details and duration • Reproductive isolation, which occurs by one of several mechanisms, is always a part of speciation
ANIMATION: Temporal isolation among cicadas To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
17.10 Allopatric Speciation • In allopatric speciation a physical barrier arises and ends gene flow between populations • Genetic divergence results in speciation • Example: Geographic isolation of Atlantic and Pacific species caused by the formation of the Isthmus of Panama
Allopatric Speciation in Archipelagos • Winds or ocean currents carry a few individuals of mainland species to remote, isolated islands chains (archipelagos) such as Hawaii • Habitats and selection pressures that differ within and between the islands foster divergences that result in allopatric speciation • Example: Hawaiian honeycreepers and thousands of other species of finches are unique to the Hawaiian archipelago
Take-Home Message: What happens after a physical barrier arises between populations? • A physical barrier that intervenes between populations or subpopulations of a species prevents gene flow among them • As gene flow ends, genetic divergences give rise to new species • This process is allopatric speciation
ANIMATED FIGURE: Allopatric speciation on an archipelago To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
17.11 Other Speciation Models • In sympatric speciation and parapatric speciation, populations speciate even without a physical barrier that blocks gene flow
Sympatric Speciation • In sympatric speciation, new species form within a home range of an existing species, in the absence of a physical barrier • Sympatric speciation can occur in a single generation when the chromosome number multiplies (polyploidy) • Example: Common bread wheat originated after related species hybridized, then the chromosome number of the hybrid offspring doubled
Sympatric Speciation in Wheat Triticum turgidum (emmer) Aegilops tauschii (goatgrass) Aegilops (wild goatgrass, unknown species) Triticum (hybrid) Triticum urartu (wild einkorn) Triticum aestivum (bread wheat) 14 AA X 14 BB 14 AB 28 AABB X 14 DD 42 AABBDD
Sympatric Speciation in Cichlids • Sympatric speciation can also occur with no change in chromosome number • Example: More than 500 species of cichlid speciated in the shallow waters of Lake Victoria – they vary in color and in patterning depending on differences in light color and water clarity in different parts of the lake (reproductive isolation)
Sympatric Speciation in Warblers • A chain of populations of greenish warblers encircles the Tibetan plateau central Asia (a ring species) • Gene flow occurs continuously all around the chain, but the two populations at the ends of the chain are different species • Individuals of these two populations overlap in range, but do not interbreed because they do not recognize one another’s songs (behavioral isolation)
Parapatric Speciation • In parapatric speciation, populations in contact along a common border evolve into distinct species • Hybrids in the contact zone are less fit than individuals on either side • Example: Two species of velvet walking worm in Tasmania can interbreed, but they only do so in a tiny area where their habitats overlap – hybrid offspring are sterile
A Giant velvet walking worm, Tasmanipatus barretti Figure 17-23a p289
b Blind velvet walking worm, T. anophthalmus Figure 17-23b p289