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Chapter 24 The Origin of Species Overview: That “Mystery of Mysteries” • In the Galápagos Islands Darwin discovered plants and animals found nowhere else on Earth – • Darwin later realized that these species, along with the islands on which they resided, were relatively new Speciation, the origin of new species, is at the focal point of evolutionary theory – Evolutionary theory must explain how new species originate and how populations evolve – Speciation forms a conceptual bridge between microevolution and macroevolution • Microevolution consists of adaptations that evolve within a population, confined to one gene pool • Macroevolution refers to evolutionary change above the species level Video: Galápagos Tortoise Concept 24.1: The biological species concept emphasizes reproductive isolation • Species is a Latin word meaning “kind” or “appearance” – Biologists compare morphology, physiology, biochemistry, and DNA sequences when grouping organisms into discrete groups The Biological Species Concept • The biological species concept states that: • • A species is a group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed in nature and produce viable, fertile offspring – but do not produce viable, fertile offspring with members of other such groups Members of a species often resemble one another because their populations are connected by gene flow Fig. 24-2 • Populations located near one another exchange alleles relatively often (a) Similarity between different species • Researchers have also shown that a low level of gene flow occurs between even widely separated populations of various plant and animal species (b) Diversity within a species • In one experiment, researchers studied gene flow in a species of bird called the grey-crowned babbler – • Gene flow in this species was thought to disperse only short distances Researchers sequenced a segment of DNA from birds in 12 widely separated populations (A-L) located throughout Australia and Papua New Guinea – They then used this data to construct evolutionary trees called gene trees that showed patterns of relatedness among the alleles at a particular locus • If a gene tree showed that some birds in one population had an allele that shared a recent common ancestor with alleles found in a different population, EXPERIMENT Example of a gene tree for population pair A-B it was reasoned that gene Allele Population Gene flow event 1 B flow must have occurred Allele 1 is more closely related to 2 A between those populations alleles 2, 3, and 4 than to Fig. 24-3a – In this way, allele relatedness for various combinations of the 12 study populations was analyzed 3 A 4 A 5 B 6 B 7 B alleles 5, 6, and 7. Inference: Gene flow occurred. Alleles 5, 6, and 7 are more closely related to one another than to alleles in population A. Inference: No gene flow occurred. • Results: – • Among the 12 study populations, researchers inferred that gene flow occurred in 7 population pairs Conclusion: – Because gene flow was detected between population separated by over 1000 km, researchers concluded that gene flow can potentially hold the grey-crowned babbler gene pool together even though individuals were thought to disperse only short distances Fig. 24-3b • The long-distance movement of alleles could result from a series of shorter movements by individual birds, or from chance events – Ex) Perhaps a storm transported the birds to a distant location RESULTS Pair of populations with detected gene flow Estimated minimum number of gene flow events to account for genetic patterns Distance between populations (km) A-B 5 340 K-L 3 720 A-C 2–3 1,390 B-C 2 1,190 F-G 2 760 G-I 2 1,110 C-E 1–2 1,310 Reproductive Isolation • The formation of new species hinges on reproductive isolation, the existence of biological factors (barriers) that impede two species from producing viable, fertile offspring – Such barriers block gene flow between species and limit the formation of hybrids • Hybrids are the offspring of crosses between different, but often closely related, species – Although a single barrier may not prevent all gene flow, a combination of several barriers can effectively isolate a species’ gene pool • Reproductive isolation can be classified by whether factors act before or after fertilization – Prezygotic (“before the zygote) barriers block fertilization from occurring by: • Impeding different species from attempting to mate • Preventing the successful completion of an attempted mating • Hindering fertilization if mating is successful • Habitat isolation: Two species encounter each other rarely, or not at all, because they occupy different habitats, even though not isolated by physical barriers – • Fig. 24-4a Ex) Although 2 species of garter snake live in the same geographic Prezygot area, one lives mainly in water and the Habitat Isolation Temporal Isolation other is primarily terrestrial Temporal isolation: Species that breed at different times of the day, different seasons, or different years cannot mix their gametes – Individuals of different species (a) Ex) In North America, the eastern spotted skunk mates in late winter but the western spotted skunk mates in late summer (c) (d) (b) • Behavioral isolation: Courtship rituals and other behaviors unique to a species are effective barriers – Such behavior rituals enable mate recognition, a way to identify potential mates of the same species Fig. 24-4a Prezygotic barriers • Ex) Blue-footed boobies mate only after a courtship display unique to their species, part of which Habitat Isolation Temporal Isolation Behavioral Isolation calls for the male to “high-step” to bring the female’s attention to his bright Individuals blue feet of Mating different species (a) attemp (c) Video: Albatross Courtship Ritual Video: Giraffe Courtship Ritual Video: Blue-footed Boobies Courtship Ritual (d) (e) • Mechanical isolation: Morphological differences can prevent successful mating – • ation Ex) The shells of 2 species of snails spiral in different directions, meaning that the snails’ genital openings are not aligned and mating cannot be completed Gametic isolation: Sperm of one species may not be able to fertilize eggs of another species – Prezygotic barriers Ex) Gametes of different species of sea urchins are unable to fuse because proteins on the surfaces Mechanical Isolation Behavioral Isolation Temporal Isolation Gametic Isolation of the eggs and sperm cannot bind to each other Mating attempt (c) (e) (f) Fertilizat (g) • Postzygotic barriers prevent the hybrid zygote from developing into a viable, fertile adult: – Reduced hybrid viability – Reduced hybrid fertility – Hybrid breakdown • Reduced hybrid viability: Genes of the different parent species may interact and impair the hybrid’s development – • Most hybrids of salamander subspecies do not complete development, and those that do are frail Reduced hybrid fertility: Even if hybrids are vigorous, they may be sterile – Ex) The hybrid offspring of a donkey and a horse is a robust but sterile mule Fig. 24-4i • Prezygotic barriers Hybrid breakdown: Some first-generation hybrids are fertile, but when they mate with another species or with either parent species, offspring of the next generation are feeble or sterile Gametic Isolation Postzygotic barriers Reduced Hybrid Viability Reduced Hybrid Fertility Hybrid Breakdown Viable, fertile offspring Fertilization (g) – (h) Ex) Although 1st generation hybrids if 2 strains of cultivated rice are vigorous and fertile, plants in the next generation that carry too many mutant recessive alleles are small and sterile (i) (j) (k) (l) Limitations of the Biological Species Concept • The biological species concept cannot be applied to fossils or asexual organisms (including all prokaryotes) – In addition, species are designated by the absence of gene flow according to the biological species concept • However, there are many pairs of morphologically and ecologically distinct species between which gene flow occurs • These species continue to remain separate despite this gene flow – Because of the limitations to the biological species concept, alternative species concepts are useful in certain situations Other Definitions of Species • Other species concepts emphasize the unity within a species rather than the separateness of different species – The morphological species concept defines a species by structural features, such as body shape • Advantages of this concept include that: – It can be applied to sexual and asexual species – It can be useful even without information on the extent of gene flow • One disadvantage, however, is that it relies on subjective criteria – Researchers may thus disagree on which structural features distinguish a species • The ecological species concept views a species in terms of its ecological niche – This refers to the sum of how members of the species interact with the nonliving and living parts of their environment • Ex) Two species of amphibians might be similar in appearance but differ in the foods they eat or in their ability to tolerate dry conditions – As with the morphological species concept, it can also be applied to sexual and asexual species • In addition, it emphasizes the role of disruptive selection as organisms adapt to different environmental conditions • The phylogenetic species concept defines a species as the smallest group of individuals that share a common ancestor – Biologists trace the phylogenetic history of a species by comparing characteristics such as morphology or molecular sequences with those of other organisms • These analyses can distinguish groups of individuals that are sufficiently different to be considered separate species – Though it can be applied to sexual and asexual species, one disadvantage of this concept is that it can be difficult to determine the degree of difference required for separate species Concept 24.2: Speciation can take place with or without geographic separation • Speciation can occur in two ways, depending on how gene flow is interrupted between populations of existing species: Fig. 24-5 – Allopatric speciation – Sympatric speciation (a) Allopatric speciation (b) Sympatric speciation Allopatric (“Other Country”) Speciation • In allopatric speciation, gene flow is interrupted or reduced when a population is divided into geographically isolated subpopulations – Ex) The water level in a lake may subside, resulting in 2+ smaller lakes that will become home to separated populations • Allopatric speciation can also occur without geological remodeling – Ex) If individuals colonize a remote area, their descendents may become geographically isolated from the parent population Fig. 24-1 • The flightless cormorant likely originated in this way from an ancestral flying species that migrated to the Galapagos Islands The Process of Allopatric Speciation • The definition of barrier depends on the ability of a population to move about – • Ex) Large or flight-capable mammals, as well as windblown pollen of plants, can cross rivers or canyons that may be formidable barriers to smaller animals Once geographic isolation has occurred, these separate populations may evolve independently through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift – Reproductive isolation may then arise as selection or drift cause the populations to diverge genetically • Ex) Selection has favored the evolution of copper tolerance in populations of monkey flowers living near copper mines, where soil copper concentrations can reach lethal levels to nontolerant individuals – When members of copper-tolerant populations interbreed with individuals from other populations, the offspring survive poorly Fig. 24-6 – Genetic analyses have shown that either the gene for copper tolerance itself or an allele genetically linked to this gene are responsible for the poor survival of these A. harrisi hybrid offspring A. leucurus Evidence of Allopatric Speciation • Many studies provide evidence that speciation can occur in allopatric populations – Ex) Data suggests that 2 modern groups of frog species began to diverge ~88 mya during the separation of the island of Madagascar from the Indian landmass • It appears that these 2 frog groups shared a common ancestor that lived on the Madagascar-India landmass before it began to break apart Fig. 24-7 • Following the breakup, allopatric speciation occurred within the separated populations of this common ancestor, resulting in the formation of many new species in each location Mantellinae (Madagascar only): 100 species Rhacophorinae (India/Southeast Asia): 310 species Other Indian/ Southeast Asian frogs 100 60 80 1 2 40 20 0 3 Millions of years ago (mya) 1 3 2 India Madagascar 88 mya 65 mya 56 mya Evidence of Allopatric Speciation The importance of allopatric speciation is also suggested by the fact that regions with many geographic barriers typically have more species than do regions with fewer barriers – • Ex) An unusually large number of bird species are found in the mountainous regions of New Guinea Laboratory and field tests also provide evidence that reproductive isolation between 2 populations generally increases as the distance between them increases – Ex) In one study of dusky salamanders, biologists brought individuals from different populations into the lab and tested their ability to produce viable, fertile offspring Fig. 24-8 • • The researchers observed little reproductive isolation in salamanders from neighboring populations In contrast, salamanders from widely separated populations often failed to reproduce Degree of reproductive isolation • 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0 0 50 200 250 100 150 Geographic distance (km) 300 Evidence of Allopatric Speciation • One possible explanation for these results is that long-distance gene flow is not occurring between the dusky salamander populations – Alternatively, long-distance gene flow between salamander populations may be outweighed by the effects of natural selection or genetic drift, causing the populations to diverge • In other studies, researchers have tested whether intrinsic reproductive barriers develop when populations are isolated experimentally and subjected to different environmental conditions – In these cases, the results also provide strong support for allopatric speciation • Experiment: Researchers divided a fruit fly population, raising some on a starch medium and others on a maltose medium – After 1 year (~40 generations), natural selection resulted in divergent evolution • Populations raised on starch digested starch more efficiently, while those raised on maltose digested maltose more efficiently – Researchers then put flies from the same or different populations in mating cages and Fig. 24-9 EXPERIMENT measured mating frequencies Initial population Some flies raised on starch medium Mating experiments after 40 generations Some flies raised on maltose medium • Results: When these 2 populations of flies were interbred, the flies 24-9 partners tended to mate withFig.like EXPERIMENT – In the control group, flies from different populations adapted to starch or maltose were about as likely mate with each other as Initial population with flies from their own population – This strong preference of flies Some to mate with like-adapted flies flies Some flies raised on raised on indicates that a reproductive starch barrier, though incomplete, was medium maltose medium Mating experiments after 40 generations forming between the divergent populations of flies RESULTS Female Female Starch Maltose 9 8 20 Mating frequencies in experimental group Starch Starch population 2 population 1 22 Starch Starch population 1 population 2 Male Male Maltose Starch • This occurred as a result of differing selective pressures as the allopatric populations adapted to different environments 18 15 12 15 Mating frequencies in control group • It must be emphasized that barriers to reproduction are intrinsic – Separation itself is not a biological barrier to reproduction – Other barriers can prevent interbreeding even when members of different populations come into contact with one another Sympatric (“Same Country”) Speciation • In sympatric speciation, speciation takes place in populations that live in the same geographic area – Although contact and thus gene flow between these populations does occur, making it less common than allopatric speciation, certain factors can bring about this kind of speciation: • Polyploidy • Habitat differentiation • Sexual selection Polyploidy • Polyploidy is the presence of extra sets of chromosomes due to accidents during cell division – There are 2 distinct forms of polyploidy: • Autopolyploidy • Allopolyploidy – An autopolyploid is an individual with more than two chromosome Fig. 24-10-3 sets, derived from one species • This can occur if cell division fails, resulting in a doubling of a cell’s chromosome number from the diploid number (2n) to a tetraploid number (4n) 2n = 6 4n = 12 Failure of cell division after chromosome duplication gives rise to tetraploid tissue. 2n Gametes produced are diploid.. 4n Offspring with tetraploid karyotypes may be viable and fertile. Polyploidy • Any triploid (3n) offspring produced by mating between these tetraploid individuals and diploid individuals of the original population have reduced fertility – Thus, the tetraploid becomes reproductively isolated, the first step towards speciation • These tetraploids can, however, produce fertile tetraploid offspring by self-pollinating (plants) or by mating with other tetraploids – Thus, in just a single generation, autoploidy can generate reproductive isolation without any geographic separation • A second form of polyploidy can occur when 2 different species interbreed and produce hybrid offspring – Most hybrids are sterile because the set of chromosomes from one species cannot pair during meiosis with the set of chromosomes from the other species • An infertile hybrid may, however, be able to reproduce asexually (plants) – In future generations, various mechanisms can change a sterile hybrid into a fertile allopolyploid • An allopolyploid is a species with multiple sets of chromosomes derived from different species Fig. 24-11-4 – Allopolyploids represent a new species because, although they are B Unreduced fertile when mating with each Species Unreduced 2n = 4 gamete gamete with 4 Hybrid other, they cannot interbreed with 7 chromosomes with 7 chromosomes chromosomes Meiotic with either parent species error Species A 2n = 6 Normal gamete n=3 Normal gamete n=3 Viable fertile hybrid (allopolyploid) 2n = 10 • Polyploidy is much more common in plants than in animals – • Botanists estimate that more than 80% of the plant species alive today are descended from ancestors that formed by polyploid speciation Many important crops (oats, cotton, potatoes, tobacco, and wheat) are polyploids – The wheat used for bread is an allohexaploid (6 sets of chromosomes, 2 sets from 3 different species) • The first of the polyploidy event that led to modern wheat probably occurred ~8,000 years ago in the Middle East as a spontaneous hybrid of an early cultivated wheat species and a wild grass – Today, plant geneticists generate new polyploids in the lab by using chemicals that induce meiotic and mitotic errors • Researchers can thus produce new hybrid species with desired qualities – Ex) A wheat hybrid can combine the high yield of wheat with the hardiness of rye Habitat Differentiation • Sympatric speciation can also result from the appearance of new ecological niches, including new habitats or resources not used by the parent population – Ex) The North American maggot fly can live on native hawthorn trees as well as more recently introduced apple trees • Because apples mature more quickly than hawthorn fruit, natural selection has favored apple-feeding flies with rapid development – These apple-feeding populations now show temporal isolation (different breeding times) from the hawthorn-feeding population – This provides a prezygotic restriction to gene flow between the 2 populations • Researchers have also identified alleles that benefit the flies that use one host plant but harm the flies that use the other host plant – Natural selection operating on these alleles therefore also provides postzygotic barriers to reproduction, further limiting gene flow Sexual Selection • There is evidence that sexual selection can drive sympatric speciation – Sexual selection for mates of different colors has likely contributed to the speciation in cichlid fish in Lake Victoria • Genetic data indicates that the ~600 species of cichlids found in this single lake have evolved in the last 100,000 years from a small number of colonist species • Researchers have studied 2 closely related sympatric species of cichlids that differ mainly in the coloration of breeding males – Their results suggest that mate choice based on male breeding coloration is the main reproductive barrier that normally keeps the gene pools of these 2 species separate Sexual Selection • Experiment: Researchers placed males and females of 2 different cichlid species together in 2 aquarium tanks – One of these tanks was put under natural natural, while the other tank was placed under a monochromatic orange lamp • Under normal light, the 2 species are noticeably different in male breeding coloration • Under monochromatic orange light, the 2 species appear very similar in color EXPERIMENT Fig. 24-12 – The researchers then observed the mate choices of the females in each tank Normal light P. pundamilia P. nyererei Monochromatic orange light Sexual Selection • Results: Under normal light, females of each species strongly preferred males of their own species – Under orange light, females of each species responded indiscriminately to males of both species • These resulting hybrids were viable and fertile • Conclusion: Mate choice by females based on male breeding coloration is the main reproductive barrier that normally keeps the gene pools of these 2 species separate – Since the species could still interbreed when this prezygotic behavioral barrier is breached artificially, the genetic divergence between the species is likely to be small • This suggests that speciation in nature has occurred relatively recently Allopatric and Sympatric Speciation: A Review • In allopatric speciation, geographic isolation restricts gene flow between populations – Other reproductive barriers may then arise by natural selection, genetic drift, or sexual selection in the isolated populations – Because of this reproductive isolation, interbreeding is prevented even if contact is restored between populations • In sympatric speciation, a reproductive barrier isolates a subset of a population without geographic separation from the parent species – Sympatric speciation can occur when gene flow to and from the isolated subpopulation is blocked • This may be the result of polyploidy, natural selection due to habitat differentiation, or sexual selection Concept 24.3: Hybrid zones provide opportunities to study factors that cause reproductive isolation If allopatric populations happen to come back into contact with one another, one possible outcome is the formation of a hybrid zone – • A hybrid zone is a region in which members of different species mate and produce hybrids Hybrid zones exhibit a variety of structures – A hybrid zone can occur in a single band where adjacent species meet – Ex) The hybrid zone for 2 species of toads extends for 4,000 km but less than 10 km wide in most places Fig. 24-13 EUROPE Fire-bellied toad range Hybrid zone Yellow-bellied toad, Bombina variegata Yellow-bellied toad range Fire-bellied toad, Bombina bombina 0.99 Allele frequency (log scale) • 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.01 40 20 30 10 0 10 20 Distance from hybrid zone center (km) • The pattern of allele frequencies across a hybrid zone can change: – The frequency of alleles specific to yellow-bellied toads is close to 100% at the edge where only this species of toad is found – This number decreases to 50% in the central portion of the zone – At the edge where only fire-bellied toads are found, the frequency of yellow-bellied toad alleles decreases all the way down to 0% Obstacles to gene flow that produce such patterns of allele frequencies across a hybrid zone may result from geographic or reproductive barriers – Fig. 24-13 In the case of the toads, it was found that hybrids often had reduced fitness compared with parent species • As a result, hybrids rarely serve as a stepping stone from which alleles are passed from one species to another EUROPE Fire-bellied toad range Hybrid zone Yellow-bellied toad, Bombina variegata Yellow-bellied toad range Fire-bellied toad, Bombina bombina 0.99 Allele frequency (log scale) • 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.01 40 20 30 10 0 10 20 Distance from hybrid zone center (km) • Other hybrid zones have more complicated spatial pattern – The distribution of hybrid zones can be more complex if parent species are found in multiple habitats within the same region • Ex) Two species of ground crickets found in the Appalachian Mountains are distributed based on temperature – One species is more successful at colder temperatures (higher elevations), while the other prefers warmer temperatures (lower elevations) – In addition, the topography of this region is complex, with many hills and valleys, resulting in many areas where patches of both species are closely interspersed • As a result, populations of the 2 parent species come into contact and hybrids are formed – The fitness of these hybrids varies from year to year, sometimes even exceeding that of either parent Hybrid Zones over Time • When closely related species meet in a hybrid zone, there are three possible outcomes: – Strengthening of reproductive barriers • This would limit the formation of hybrids – Weakening of reproductive barriers • This may lead to the fusion of 2 distinct species into a single species Fig. 24-14-4 – Continued formation of hybrid individuals • This would create a long-term stable hybrid zone Isolated population diverges Possible outcomes: Hybrid zone Reinforcement OR Fusion Gene flow Hybrid Population (five individuals are shown) OR Barrier to gene flow Stability Reinforcement: Strengthening Reproductive Barriers The reinforcement of barriers occurs when hybrids are less fit than the parent species – • Natural selection thus strengthens prezygotic barriers to reproduction, reducing the rate of formation of unfit hybrids Fig. 24-15 Where reinforcement occurs, reproductive barriers should be stronger for sympatric than allopatric species – – In allopatric populations of flycatchers, males of 2 species closely resemble one another In sympatric populations of these birds, the males of these 2 species look very different Sympatric male pied flycatcher 28 Allopatric male pied flycatcher Pied flycatchers 24 Number of females • Collared flycatchers 20 16 12 8 4 (none) 0 Females mating Own Other with males from: species species Sympatric males Own Other species species Allopatric males Reinforcement: Strengthening Reproductive Barriers • Female flycatchers do not select males of the other species when given a choice between males in sympatric populations Fig. 24-15 – On the contrary, female flycatchers frequently make mistakes when selecting between males from allopatric populations 28 Allopatric male pied flycatcher Pied flycatchers 24 Number of females • Thus, barriers to reproduction appear to be stronger in birds from sympatric populations than in birds from allopatric populations Sympatric male pied flycatcher Collared flycatchers 20 16 12 8 4 (none) 0 Females mating Own Other with males from: species species Sympatric males Own Other species species Allopatric males Fusion: Weakening Reproductive Barriers • Another possible outcome of 2 species contacting one another in a hybrid zone is that gene flow may occur if reproductive barriers are weak – So much gene flow may occur that these barriers weaken even further and the gene pools of the 2 species become increasingly alike – If gene flow is great enough, the parent species can even fuse into a single species • Ex) In the past 30 years, 200 of the former 600 species of Lake Victoria cichlids have vanished Fig. 24-16 – Researchers think that murky waters caused by pollution may have reduced the ability of females to use color to distinguish males of their own species – As a result of these “accidental” matings, many hybrids have been produced, leading to fusion of the parent species’ genes Pundamilia nyererei Pundamilia pundamilia Pundamilia “turbid water,” hybrid offspring from a location with turbid water Stability: Continued Formation of Hybrid Individuals • A third possible outcome of 2 species contacting one another in a hybrid zone is that hybrids will continue to be produced, creating a stable hybrid zone – This may occur if the hybrid zone is very narrow, even when hybrid offspring are less fit than either parent species, as is seen in the fire-bellied and yellow-bellied toad hybrid zone • In this case, extensive gene flow from outside the zone resulting in the continued production of hybrids may overwhelm selection for increased reproductive isolation inside the hybrid zone – If the hybrid zone were wider, this would be less likely to occur, since the centers of the zone would receive little gene flow from distant populations outside the hybrid zone Stability: Continued Formation of Hybrid Individuals • In cases where hybrids have increased fitness, local extinctions of parent species within the hybrid zone can prevent the breakdown of reproductive barriers – Though hybrids of the 2 ground cricket species sometimes have higher fitness than the parent species, data shows that gene flow is not extensive enough to fuse the species • This is because the parent species meet at locations where one or both of them are near the limit of the environmental conditions they can tolerate • As a result, even a slight change in the local environment can cause one or the other parent species to disappear from that location • Because location where hybrids are formed may appear and disappear rapidly, hybrids remain uncommon and fusion of the gene pools is prevented by insufficient time for reproductive barriers to break down Concept 24.4: Speciation can occur rapidly or slowly and can result from changes in few or many genes • Many questions remain concerning how long it takes for new species to form, or how many genes need to differ between species – • To gather information about how long it takes for speciation to occur, broad patterns in speciation can be studied using the fossil record, morphological data, or molecular data The fossil record includes many examples of species that appear suddenly, persist essentially unchanged for some time, and then apparently disappear – Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould coined the term punctuated equilibrium to describe these periods of apparent stasis punctuated by sudden change Fig. 24-17 – All species do not show a punctuated pattern; rather they change more gradually over long periods of time (a) Punctuated pattern Time (b) Gradual pattern Speciation Rates • The punctuated pattern in the fossil record and evidence from lab studies suggests that speciation can be rapid or relatively slow – The interval between speciation events can range from 4,000 years (some cichlids) to 40,000,000 years (some beetles), with an average of 6,500,000 years • This extreme variability in the time it takes for speciation to occur indicates that organisms do not produce new species at regular time intervals – Rather, speciation begins only after gene flow between populations has been interrupted, perhaps by an unpredictable event that causes geographic isolation • Once this gene flow has been interrupted, the populations must diverge genetically to such an extent that they become reproductively isolated Studying the Genetics of Speciation • The explosion of genomics is enabling researchers to identify specific genes involved in some cases of speciation – This has allowed them to address the question of how many genes change when a new species is formed – In a few cases, speciation is due to a change in a single gene • – Ex) In one species of Japanese snail, alleles of a single gene can induce a mechanical barrier to reproduction, causing their shells to spiral in different directions and thus orienting their genitals in a manner that prevents mating In other organisms, the speciation process in influenced by a larger number of genes and gene interactions Fig. 24-19 – Ex) Hybrid sterility between 2 subspecies of Drosophila results from gene interactions among at least 4 loci • Overall, studies conducted to date suggest that a few or many genes can influence the evolution of reproductive isolation and thus speciation From Speciation to Macroevolution • Macroevolution is the cumulative effect of many speciation and extinction events – Speciation may begin with differences as small as the color on a cichlid’s back • As speciation occurs again and again, however, these differences accumulate, eventually leading to species the differ greatly from their ancestors – In addition, as these new groups form, other groups may shrink, losing species to extinction You should now be able to: 1. Define and discuss the limitations of the four species concepts 2. Describe and provide examples of prezygotic and postzygotic reproductive barriers 3. Distinguish between and provide examples of allopatric and sympatric speciation 4. Explain how polyploidy can cause reproductive isolation 5. Define the term hybrid zone and describe three outcomes for hybrid zones over time