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Dive into the fascinating world of life's diversity and evolution, from the incredible variety of 1.5 million known species to the complex mechanisms of natural selection driving evolutionary paths. Explore speciation processes, ranging from allopatric to polyploidy, as well as patterns like anagenesis and cladogenesis. Discover the tempo of speciation through gradualism and punctuated equilibrium, and learn about the impacts of inbreeding depression and genetic drift on populations. Understand the importance of maintaining genetic diversity and the challenges faced by smaller populations in ensuring survival.
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DIVERSITY AND EVOLUTION Chapter 2
Diversity of life • Approximately 1.5 million living species described • Likely at least 10 million species today • May represent only 1% of species ever to have lived on earth • 1 billion species presumed to have lived
Diversity of body form • Tremendous diversity within each group of plants, animals, fungi, protistans, bacteria • Structural complexity - apparently purposeful adaptation of many characteristics to the environment
Reason for this diversity? • Natural selection • Physical environment acts on various characteristics of organisms (variation among individuals of some species) • Sorts out “harmful” ones, leaving individuals with “beneficial” or “neutral” characteristics to produce next generation • Keeps organisms well-suited for survival in their environment
Natural selection drives evolution • Broad scale • Development of various “forms” or species to best match the environment • Can best take advantage of variations within that environment
History of concept of evolution by natural selection • Lamarck - inheritance of acquired characteristics • Darwin, Wallace - natural selection, but mechanism really unknown • Mendel - genetic understanding of the acquisition of inherited traits
Evolution by natural selection - established truths • 1) individuals that form a population of a species are not identical
Evolution by natural selection - established truths • 2) some of the variation between individuals is heritable
Evolution by natural selection - established truths • 3) all populations are capable of exponential growth, but most individuals die before reproducing, and most others reproduce at less than their maximum rate
Evolution by natural selection - established truths • 4) different ancestors leave different numbers of descendents; they do not all contribute equally to subsequent generations
SPECIATION Interaction of heritable variation, natural selection, barriers to gene flow
Allopatric (Geographic) Speciation • Separating single, interbreeding population into two or more spatially isolated populations • Geographic barrier, remains long enough for speciation • Founder effect, genetic drift (random mutations)
Parapatric Speciation • No spatial isolation • Portion of population invades new, adjacent habitat • Little to no movement/interbreeding • Differing natural selection in differing habitats
Sympatric Speciation • No spatial isolation • Production of new species within a population • Rare • Most likely to occur in insect parasites of plants, animals • Requires stable polymorphism and under- or unused resource
Polyploidy • Abrupt speciation by doubling the number of chromosomes • Most common in plants • Agricultural-wheat, alfalfa, potatoes • Native-birches, willows
Anagenesis • One species changes into another species over time • Original species “evolves” out of existence and is replaced by new species • Evolutionary extinction
Cladogenesis • One species gives rise to one or more additional species while still remaining • Clade-set of species descended from a particular ancestral species (e.g., Darwin’s finches)
Gradualism • Steady change in character(s) resulting in many intermediate forms exhibiting “gradual” shift
Punctuated equilibrium • Rapid, abrupt changes that produce quick shifts in character • No intermediate forms
Inbreeding depression • Mating among close relatives produces an increase in expression of recessive traits, many of which are deleterious • Often results from small population size • Mortality may be increased • “Tighter” inbreeding results in more rapid loss of genetic variation within population
But…. • Not all populations are harmed by inbreeding • Long-term, small populations (e.g., on islands) may be adapted to inbreeding and survive well even in face of it
Outbreeding • Some degree of outbreeding usually beneficial in maintaining genetic diversity • But too much can also be harmful • Too many differences may lead to problems
Smaller populations • Genetic variation declines faster in smaller population because of inbreeding • Rule of thumb-50 individuals needed to prevent inbreeding • Problem for saving California condor • Only 26 individuals in 1986
Genetic drift • Larger population not subject to inbreeding can lose genetic variation at rates similar to small populations via genetic drift • Some individuals do not mate, not represented genetically in next generation
Genetic drift-cont. • Rule of thumb-happens only in populations <500 in size • Genetic drift can be counteracted by minimal levels of immigration into the population
Neighborhoods • Even big populations may run into problems if individuals don’t move around much to mate • Some also just don’t reproduce • Effective population size may then be quite small • E.g., grizzly bear in Yellowstone • Actual population ~200 • Effective population ~50 (25%) • Subject to loss of variation
Bottlenecks • Can also reduce genetic variation • Bottlenecks - periodic reductions in population size can reduce genetic variation greatly even if average population size is much larger
Founder Effects • Can also reduce genetic variation • Founder effects - developing gene pool of growing population is limited by what variation founders had, plus mutation • Pair of founders at most have 4 variations in a gene
Genetic • Increase or decrease variability within a population • DNA - mistakes or mutations during copying of genetic code • Gene or point mutation - most important for enriching the gene pool • Chromosome mutation - most important for rearranging the gene pool
Point Mutations • Change in nucleotide base at single location • Change in single amino acid within protein, or entirely different protein • Frameshift mutation - insertion or deletion of single base pair
Mutagens and mutations • Mutations usually produced by mutagens (e.g., weak cosmic rays) • 1 mutation per gene in every 100,000 sex cells • Higher organisms have ~10,000 genes • 1 in 10 individuals has newly created mutation
Most mutations are harmful, but.. • 1 in 1000 mutations may be beneficial • 1 in 10,000 individuals per generation has a useful mutation • Most individuals have at least one mutant gene (original, or passed down from ancestors)
Mutations and Speciation • Estimate - 500 mutations necessary to produce new species from existing one • Rate of new mutations ~1 million times greater than needed to account for known rate of evolution
Chromosomal Mutations • No change to variability • Rearrange what is there • Deletions, duplications, inversions, translocations
Other changes • Polyploidy - e.g., tetraploid • Failure of gametes to reduce to haploid state during meiosis • 2N + 2N = 4N
So… • Mutations produce the variation, and natural selection acts upon the changes • Add in: nonrandom mating, changing environment • End product = EVOLUTION
Amount of Variation • Results from protein analyses (electrophoresis) • Within a population - 15-58% of genes exhibit variation • Within individuals - 3-17% of genes exhibit variation
Applying this information: 1) Separate populations of organisms with movement of individuals among populations generally exhibit most variation within each population, and very little between or among populations
Applying this information: • 2) Reduced movement of individuals among populations produces more variation between or among populations • Populations diverge genetically
Applying this information: • 3) Conservation of endangered species which move around very little will require protection of many populations in many different habitats to conserve genetic diversity within the species