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Chapter 23 The Origin of Species

Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question?. What is a species? Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate. Two Concepts of Species. 1. Morphospecies 2. Biological Species. Morphospecies. Organisms with very similar morphology or physical form. Problem.

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Chapter 23 The Origin of Species

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  1. Chapter 23The Origin of Species

  2. Question? • What is a species? • Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

  3. Two Concepts of Species 1. Morphospecies 2. Biological Species

  4. Morphospecies • Organisms with very similar morphology or physical form.

  5. Problem • Where does extensive phenotype variation fit?

  6. Two Schools 1. Splitters - Break apart species into new ones on the basis of small phenotype changes. 2. Lumpers - Group many phenotype variants into one species.

  7. Biological Species • A group of organisms that could interbreed in nature and produce fertile offspring.

  8. Key Points • Could interbreed. • Fertile offspring. Heaven Scent an F1 hybrid between 2 species, but sterile.

  9. Morphospecies & Biological Species • Often overlap. • Serve different purposes.

  10. African Violets • Originally ~20 species • 70,000 cultivars

  11. Problem • What is a species? • Some plants didn’t fit placement. • Plants freely interbreed. • Answer – coming up later

  12. Speciation Requires: 1. Variation in the population. 2. Selection. 3. Isolation.

  13. Reproductive Barriers • Serve to isolate a populations from other gene pools. • Create and maintain “species”.

  14. Main Types of Barriers Prezygotic - Prevent mating or fertilization. Postzygotic - Prevent viable, fertile offspring.

  15. Prezygotic - Types 1. Habitat Isolation 2. Behavioral Isolation 3. Temporal Isolation 4. Mechanical Isolation 5. Gametic Isolation

  16. Habitat Isolation • Populations live in different habitats or ecological niches. • Ex – mountains vs lowlands.

  17. Mating or courtship behaviors different. Different sexual attractions operating. Ex – songs and dances in birds. Behavioral Isolation

  18. Breeding seasons or time of day different. Ex – flowers open in morning or evening. Temporal Isolation

  19. Mechanical Isolation • Structural differences that prevent gamete transfer. • Ex – anthers not positioned to put pollen on a bee, but will put pollen on a bird.

  20. Gametic Isolation • Gametes fail to attract each other and fuse. • Ex – chemical markers on egg and sperm fail to match.

  21. Postzygotic Types 1. Reduced Hybrid Viability 2. Reduced Hybrid Fertility 3. Hybrid Breakdown

  22. Reduced Hybrid Viability • Zygote fails to develop or mature. • Ex – when different species of frogs hybridize.

  23. Reduced Hybrid Fertility • Hybrids are viable, but can't reproduce sexually. • Chromosome count often “odd” so meiosis won’t work. • Ex - mules

  24. Hybrid Breakdown • Offspring are fertile, but can't compete successfully with the “pure breeds”. • Ex – many plant hybrids

  25. Modes of Speciation 1. Allopatric Speciation 2. Sympatric Speciation Both work through a block of gene flow between two populations.

  26. Allopatric Speciation • Allopatric = other homeland • Ancestral population split by a geographical feature. • Comment – the size of the geographical feature may be very large or small.

  27. Example • Pupfish populations in Death Valley. • Generally happens when a specie’s range shrinks for some reason.

  28. Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation 1. Founder's Effect - with the peripheral isolate. 2. Genetic Drift – gives the isolate population variation as compared to the original population.

  29. Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation 3. Selection pressure on the isolate differs from the parent population.

  30. Result • Gene pool of isolate changes from the parent population. • New Species can form.

  31. Comment • Populations separated by geographical barriers may not evolve much. • Ex - Pacific and Atlantic Ocean populations separated by the Panama Isthmus.

  32. Examples • Fish - 72 identical kinds. • Crabs - 25 identical kinds. • Echinoderms - 25 identical kinds.

  33. Adaptive Radiation • Rapid emergence of several species from a common ancestor (Allopatric speciation) • Common in island and mountain top populations or other “empty” environments.

  34. Mechanism • Resources are temporarily infinite. • Most offspring survive. • Result - little Natural Selection and the gene pool can become very diverse.

  35. When the Environment Saturates • Natural Selection resumes. • New species form rapidly if isolation mechanisms work.

  36. Examples • Galapagos – Finches • Usambaras Mountains – African violets

  37. Sympatric Speciation • Sympatric = same homeland • New species arise within the range of parent populations. • Can occur In a single generation.

  38. Gradualism Evolution • Darwinian style evolution. • Small gradual changes over long periods time.

  39. Gradualism Predicts: • Long periods of time are needed for evolution. • Fossils should show continuous links.

  40. Problem • Gradualism doesn’t fit the fossil record very well. (too many “gaps”).

  41. Punctuated Evolution • theory that deals with the “pacing” of evolution. • Elridge and Gould – 1972.

  42. Punctuated Equilibrium • Evolution has two speeds of change: • Gradualism or slow change • Rapid bursts of speciation

  43. Predictions • Speciation can occur over a very short period of time (1 to 1000 generations). • Fossil record will have gaps or missing links.

  44. Predictions • New species will appear in the fossil record without connecting links or intermediate forms. • Established species will show gradual changes over long periods of time.

  45. Possible Mechanism • Adaptive Radiation, especially after mass extinction events allow new species to originate. • Saturated environments favor gradual changes in the current species.

  46. Comment • Punctuated Equilibrium is the newest ”Evolution Theory”. • Best explanation of fossil record evidence to date.

  47. Origin of Evolutionary Novelty • How do macroevolution changes originate? • Several ideas discussed in textbook (read them) • Exaptation • Heterochrony • Homeosis

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