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Chapter 24: The Origin of Species. Defining a “Species”. Species comes from Latin word meaning “kind” or “appearance”. Red Cardinal. Red Cardinal. FL Scrub Jay. Blue Jay. Defining a “Species”. Eastern Meadowlark. Morphological Species Concept
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Defining a “Species” • Species comes from Latin word meaning “kind” or “appearance” Red Cardinal Red Cardinal FL Scrub Jay Blue Jay
Defining a “Species” Eastern Meadowlark • Morphological Species Concept • Classification scheme based on physical characteristics • However… • Some species look very similar to one another • Some species have a lot of variation for morphological characteristics • Some species have sexual dimorphism Western Meadowlark
Defining a “Species” • Ecological Species Concept • Classification scheme based on organisms’ role in natural community • Phylogenetic Species Concept • Smallest group of individuals sharing common ancestor
Evolutionary Tree: Describes relationship between descendants and ancestors Evolutionary Trees are hypotheses of current understanding of relationships
Defining a “Species” • Biological Species Concept • Group of populations with potential for successful breeding in nature and to create fertile offspring • Biological Species Concept is widely accepted and used by biologists today • Some situations require alternative concepts: • Identifying new species in the fossil record • Identifying prokaryotes (reproduce asexually)
Reproductive Barriers • Reproductive Isolation= prevents gene flow between species and maintains “separate” species • Prevents closely related species from successfully mating • Hybrids= offspring of 2 species mating “Grolar” Bear Polar Bear Grizzly Bear
Reproductive Barriers • Two Types of Barriers: • Prezygotic Barriers= prevents mating or fertilization from happening • Postzygotic Barriers= happens after fertilization occurs, prevents viable, reproductive offspring
Prezygotic Barriers: Temporal Isolation • Mating occurs during different seasons • Mating occurs during different times of day • Diurnal vs Nocturnal
Prezygotic Barriers: Behavioral Isolation Birds of Paradise
Chromosome #= 36 Prezygotic Barriers • Mechanical Isolation • Gametic Isolation Chromosome #= 44
Postzygotic Barriers • If zygote forms, barriers can prevent continued hybridization • Hybrid inviability • Reduced hybrid viability
Postzygotic Barriers: Reduced Hybrid Fertility Hybrid is viable but sterile Female Horse Male Donkey Mule
Postzygotic Barriers: Hybrid Breakdown Viable Offspring First generation (F1) offspring are viable and fertile Second generation (F2) has reduced viability # of live offspring at birth Species 1 Hybrid Species 2
Development of Reproductive Barriers • Once separated, populations may experience different environmental factors • Natural selection can act on genetic variation and lead to development of reproductive barriers • Once reproductive barriers are in place, separated populations become different species • If populations come into contact again, individuals will not be able to interbreed
Speciation • New species can arise from reproductive isolation between populations • No migration or gene flow • Process of one species separating into 2 or more species • Development of new species leads to biodiversity • The original species is the “ancestor” species • New species share many characteristics due to common ancestor
Evolution of a Population Generations 1 2 3 • Change over time • Types of Natural Selection • Directional Selection • Highest reproduction in one extreme phenotype • Stabilizing Selection • Highest reproduction of intermediate phenotypes • Disruptive Selection • Highest reproduction of two extreme phenotypes Most likely to lead to speciation
Speciation • Allopatric Speciation= New species arise from reproductive isolation of one population from another population • Sympatric Speciation= New species arise in the same location as original population
Figure 24.5 (a) Allopatric speciation. A population forms a new species while geographically isolated from its parent population. Sympatric speciation. A subset of a population forms a new species without geographic separation. (b)
Allopatric Speciation • New species arise from reproductive isolation of one population from another population • Different environments have different selection pressures • Often results from a geographic barrier • Blocks gene flow
Geographic Barriers River Formation Mountain Formation Colonization Continental Drift
Habitat Fragmentation • Separation of populations into smaller, isolated populations • Usually result of conversion of habitat or creation of a barrier • Habitat fragmentation reduces overall area, resources, and population sizes of species • Reduces migration of individuals between distance populations N = 100 N=50 N=70 N=30
Allopatric Speciation • Once separated, individual populations can evolve due to differences in • Natural selection • Mutation • Genetic Drift
Sympatric Speciation • New species arise in the same location as original population • 3 Methods of Sympatric Speciation: • Polyploid Speciation= individual has too many chromosomes, isolating individual from rest of population • Habitat Differentiation= population of species separate because of different uses of habitat • Sexual Selection= females choose mates based on specific characteristics
Polyploid Speciation • Polyploidy= errors in meiosis resulted in more than 2 sets of chromosomes in offspring • Autopolyploid= an individual with more than two chromosome sets, derived from one species • An allopolyploid is a species with multiple sets of chromosomes derived from different species • Hybridization + errors in meiosis • Common in plants • Plants can self-fertilize, allowing reproduction despite error in chromosome number • ~50% of plants are polyploid • Wheat, potatoes, apples, cotton
Polyploid Speciation • Individual has more chromosomes than others • Reproductive isolation from rest of population • Creates a new species
Habitat Differentiation • Population of species isolated because of different uses of habitat • Genetic trait allows some of the population to exploit resources differently • Often related to food sources • Subset of population obtains food in one location • Another subset obtains food in different location • Over time, reproductive barriers can develop • Habitat isolation • Temporal isolation
Habitat Differentiation Original Habitat: Native Hawthorn Tree • North American apple maggot fly • Species currently separated into 2 subspecies Apple Trees
Sexual Selection • Individuals choose mates based on specific characteristics • If females choose mates based on coloration and different females prefer different colorations, eventually lead to reproductive isolation
Sexual Selection • African cichlids in Lake Victoria • As many as 600 different species within one lake
Rates of Evolution • Gradualism Model: slow change in population through time • Punctuated Equilibrium Model: sudden change leading to new species followed by periods of stability
Figure 24.17 (a) Punctuated pattern Time (b) Gradual pattern
Types of Evolution • Macroevolution= change in groups above the level of species, often results in new taxonomic groups • Methods of Macroevolution • Adaptive radiation= periods of change when many new species originate from a common ancestor • Mass extinctions= large number of species go extinct within a relatively short amount of time • Environmental change • 5 mass extinctions have occurred through geological time with 50% or more species lost • Plate tectonics and Continental drift= movement of Earth’s plates
Mass extinction led to adaptive radiation of mammals 70% of species lost Cretaceous –Tertiary Extinction Event 1.8 mya 65 mya 145 mya 199 mya Total Number of Species: 5,448 mammal species (IUCN, 2008)
Speciation leads to increases in biodiversity 1.8 million named species