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CHAPTER 24 THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES Different Species Of Japanese Ants!!! What is a species ? How does speciation occur ? Mutations + Sexual recombination + genetic drift +gene flow + natural selection! = Macroevolution: --the origin of new species, genera, families, orders, classes, phyla, and kingdoms Speciation—the origin of new species SPECIES “kind””appearance” – group of populations A biological species is the whose members can largest set of populations interbreed and in which genetic exchange produce fertile is possible and is offspring; genetically isolated from other populations. Different Species Of HUMANS??? What is a species ? How does speciation occur ? Distinctions between species are not always clear. Subspecies have small differences from other subspecies and usually have C. hutchinsii hutchinsii geographical variation. C. canadensis canadensis Concepts of species: 1. Biological species concept—reproductive isolation 2. Morphological species concept—measurable anatomical differences between species 3. Ecological species concept— based on the ‘niche’ – environment and organisms’ role in using it 4. Pluralistic species concept—cohesion of (2) and (3) Situation: 2 populations that are microevolving (different p,q) -what will make them 2 species? -not having fertile offspring! a) Prezygotic barriers b) Post zygotic barriers Organisms of different species cannot interbreed for a number of reasons. Prezygotic barriers- hinder fertilization 1) Habitat isolation—live in different places ex: water vs. terrestrial in garter snakes Prezygotic barriers hinder fertilization 2) behavioral isolation—respond only to members of the same species; ex: firefly flashes • • Ex. Firefly flashes, Bower Bird nest Prezygotic barriers hinder fertilization 3) temporal isolation—different breeding times (ex. W. and E. skunks) EASTERNsummer WESTERN winter Prezygotic barriers hinder fertilization 4) mechanical isolation—anatomical Ex. Damsel fly genitalia, flowers incompatibility • Prezygotic barriers hinder fertilization 5) gametic isolation—gametes may not be recognized by other species for fertilization (molecular recognition missing between egg and sperm) Postzygotic barriers - gametes can get together to make a zygote, BUT barriers prevent a zygote from developing properly Postzygotic barriers prevent a zygote from developing properly. 1. Reduced hybrid viability—development is aborted at some embryonic stage. Ex. frogs Postzygotic barriers prevent a zygote from developing properly. 2. Reduced hybrid fertility—hybrids are sterile—usually there is a failure of meiosis in these hybrids so they cannot produce viable (good) gametes Postzygotic barriers prevent a zygote from developing properly. 3) hybrid breakdown—first-generation hybrids may be fertile, but secondgeneration offspring are not viable. Ex. cotton SUMMARY RecipeAnagenesis to make a New = Species: one species changes 1) Need intotoanother create a barrier for gene flow within a population- that is a barrier for productive SEX 2) Need to maintain this barrier (prezygotic/postzygotic) Cladogenesis = so that the two groups can continue branching accumulating of a new differences through mutation/sexual species from recombination a (acted upon by natural species selection that - of course you knew that!) 3) Andcontinues then PRESTO! to You have a new species (give or take exista million years!) How do new species arise (barrier creation • Allopatric speciation (“other homeland”) • Sympatric speciation (“together”) Allopatric Speciation --occurs when geographical barriers block gene flow *small populations are more likely to change enough to become a new species RING SPECIES HAWAIIN HONEYCREEPERS 'I'IWI - Vestiaria coccinea 'AMAKIHI - Hemignathus virens Found in 'ohi'a lehua Common in native forests above 2,000 forests. Feeds on the nectar of feet. PALILA Feeds -more Loxioides on insects bailleui and is less 'ohi'a lehua flowers 'AKOHEKOHE - Palmeria high in thedolei dependant Endangered on nectar. Female is a darker, forest canopy Crested honeycreeper and from- Endangered tubular olive Found green only color. in the dry forests on the slopes blossoms Found only in in thethe understory. rain forests of east Maui of Mauna Kea, Big Island, 6,000 to 9,000 at elevations of 4,500 to 6,500 feet. feet. Adaptive radiation— evolution of many different species from a common ancestor *common on islands* 1. gene pool at the edge is probably different Peripheral isolate = small population at (founder effect) the fringe of a larger population’s range for speciation 2.--good until the candidate peripheral population becomes larger, genetic drift will occur 3. natural selection may be different in the fringe environment Sympatric Speciation --a new species can evolve without geographic isolation --genetic changes can prevent members of the same species from mating ex. Apple maggot flies, polyploid plants Sympatric Speciation --a new species can evolve without geographic isolation -- female lays egg where she grew up Apples (introduced to US by immigrants) Apple Maggot Flies Hawthorns (native to US) One species=autopolyploid Tetraploid plants can’t interbreed with normal plantspostzygotic barrier 2 different species form an allopolyploid hybridthese usually propagate asexually (sympatric or allopatric?) Wheat evolved from 2 meiotic errors. • What type of speciation is this? Speciation is at the boundary between microevolution (population allelle frequency change) and macroevolution (accumulation of change over millions of years). Rate of Speciation -Gradualism vs. Punctuated Equilibrium Gradualism—species diverge gradually over a long period of time Punctuated equilibrium—species diverge in spurts of relatively rapid change --long periods of equilibrium punctuated by short periods of speciation Development genes are important in macroevolution. Allometric growth— difference in relative rates of growth of various parts of the body Paedomorphosis—adult retains features that were juvenile structures in its ancestors. ex. some salamanders retain gills •Heterochrony, an evolutionary change in the rate or timing of developmental events. Temporal changes in development that differ between species--heterochrony Homeosis = alteration in basic body design controlled by small sets of gene in development—homeotic genes (Hox complex) Evolution is not goal-oriented--species selection produces an evolutionary trend