* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Evolution - gomezbiomccaskey
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Evolution Versus Genetic Equilibrium If a population is not evolving and allele frequencies do not change, the population is in genetic equilibrium. When allele frequency does change, the population is evolving. 5 conditions that can lead to Evolution (disturb genetic equilibrium) Nonrandom mating Small population size (Genetic Drift) Immigration or emmigration Mutations Natural Selection Genetic Drift due to Founder Effect Sample of Original Population Founding Population A Descendants Founding Population B Genetic Drift: rapid changes in gene frequency of a small, isolated population Genetic Drift due toFounder Effect Sample of Original Population Descendants Founding Population A Founding Population B Natural Selection If different genotypes have different fitness, genetic equilibrium will be disrupted and evolution will occur. TYPES OF EVOLUTION Convergent Evolution – when species that are not closely related evolve similar traits (two species look like they are closely related and they are not) • Example: dolphins (mammals) and sharks (fish) Divergent Evolution – one species evolves into two or more species with different characteristics Example: lions and tigers evolved from a common ancestor The Process of Speciation Speciation Speciation –evolution of two different species from one common ancestor; formation of a new species Species- defined as a population or group of populations whose members can interbreed and produce FERTILE offspring What keeps two species apart so that they evolve differently? Isolating Mechanisms – keep groups apart Isolating Mechanisms Reproductive Isolation- when two populations no longer interbreed and changes in one gene pool cannot spread to the other, (gene pool splits) Can happen by behavorial isolation, geographic isolation, and temporal isolation Behavioral Isolation Two populations who are capable of interbreeding develop differences in behaviors (behaviors don’t match) Example: Eastern and Western Meadowlarks do not mate with each other because they use different songs to attract mates. -Certain species of lightning bugs use different blinking patterns to attract mates. Geographic Isolation When two populations are separated by geographic barriers such as rivers, mountains, or bodies of water. Examples: squirrels separated by the Grand Canyon Squirrels in the Grand Canyon Figure 15–14: Geographic Distribution of Living Species Beaver NORTH AMERICA Muskrat Muskrat Beaver and Muskrat Coypu Capybara Capybara SOUTH AMERICA Coypu Coypu and Capybara Temporal Isolation When two or more species reproduce at different times Example: 3 species of orchids have flowers that last only one day and must pollinate on that day. The species bloom on different days and they don’t cross pollinate one another. -Different species of skunks mate at different times of the year