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Section 16-3 The Process of Speciation How does speciation occur? • A genetic change in one individual can spread through the population as reproduction occurs •If the change increases fitness it will increase in the population How does speciation occur? • For new species to form, gene pools must be separated • As new species evolve, reproductive isolation occurs Reproductive isolation can develop through: • Behavioral isolation • Geographic isolation • Temporal isolation Behavioral Isolation Differences in reproductive behaviors prevent interbreeding Example: Birds that use different songs to attract mates won't interbreed Geographic Isolation Populations are separated by geographical barriers – If barrier is removed (ex. lakes connect during a flood) and populations can still interbreed, it's still one species – Barriers may not separate all organisms (a river doesn't separate bird populations) Temporal Isolation Species reproduce at different times Example: Plants that flower at different times Darwin's Finches Darwin's Hypothesis: Natural selection shaped the beaks of different finch populations Peter and Rosemary Grant The Grants researched two testable assumptions that Darwin's theory was based on Testable Assumptions: • Enough heritable variation in beak size and shape for natural selection to act upon • Different beaks cause different fitnesses (allowing natural selection to occur) Variation • They measured and banded individual birds on one of the Galapagos islands – Data showed great variation of heritable traits Natural selection • Birds with different-sized beaks had different fitnesses during drought – Finches with large beaks could crack large seeds that others couldn't – Over time the average beak size of the population increased Steps of speciation in Darwin's Finches • Founding of new populations • Geographic isolation • Changes in the gene pool • Reproductive isolation • Ecological competition How we think it happened: Founders Arrive • Long ago, a few finches from the South American mainland flew or were blown to one of the Galapagos islands (SPECIES A) How we think it happened: Geographic isolation • Some birds from species A crossed to another island • The two populations were isolated (finches do not normally fly over open water) How we think it happened: Changes in gene pool • Natural selection caused the populations to evolve different beaks depending on available food sources How we think it happened: Reproductive Isolation • Finches mate with birds with the same-sized beaks as they have (behavioral isolation) – The populations are now separate species (species A on first island, Species B on second island) How we think it happened: Ecological Competition • If species B returns to the first island, A and B must compete for food • Differences increase • Species B evolves into species C How we think it happened: Continued evolution Repeated isolation on a island, genetic change and reproductive isolation produced 13 species of finches Studying Evolution Since Darwin New data from genetics, physics and biochemistry have supported evolution New discoveries have led to new hypotheses that refine and expand Darwin's original theory Many questions remain presently unanswered