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Plant Speciation

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Title: Plant Speciation


1
Plant Speciation Evolution (PBIO 475/575)
  • Species Concepts, Taxonomy and Evolutionary Models

2
Species Concepts
  • Morphological
  • Species are distinguished as sets of populations
    separated by a detectable morphological
    discontinuity from other sets
  • e.g., "Species are the smallest groups that are
    consistently and persistently distinct, and
    distinguishable by ordinary means" (Arthur
    Cronquist)

3
Species Concepts
  • Morphological (cont.)
  • Employed implicitly by all studies at least as a
    beginning point, whether admitted explicitly or
    not
  • Without other data on reproductive behavior,
    hybridization, ecology, etc., this is the only
    option
  • Range of macro- and micromorphological traits
    available, depending on cleverness of
    investigator (most "portable")

4
Species Concepts
  • Morphological (cont.)
  • Problems
  • Phenotypic variation fits loosely with genetic
    variation and, occasionally, with reproductive or
    other isolation
  • Very similar organisms may not be especially
    closely related genetically

5
Species Concepts
  • Morphological (cont.)
  • Problems (cont.)
  • Morphological variation might appear
    semi-continuous or "clinal" but sets of
    populations could be isolated in nature (no
    available data)
  • Substantial cytogenetic or other "endophenotypic"
    variation (e.g., physiological) may not be
    expressed in morphology

6
Species Concepts
  • Biological
  • "Species is a group of interbreeding populations
    which are reproductively isolated from other such
    groups" (Ernst Mayr)
  • Few studies have empirically ascertained whether
    groups of populations are capable of
    interbreeding
  • Note that capability for gene flow in lab is
    not realized gene flow in nature, but BSC
    requires laboratory demonstration

7
Species Concepts
  • Biological (cont.)
  • A few studies have documented reproductive
    isolation between sets of populations called
    biological species many others have used
    circumstantial data (e.g., absence of hybrids in
    region of overlap, low pollen fertility in
    hybrids)
  • Many use a morphological species concept in
    practice with circumstantial observations
    suggesting reproductive isolation
  • Proponents argue that it holds for a great many
    groups (probably more true for animals than
    plants)

8
Species Concepts
  • Biological (cont.)
  • Problems
  • Hybridization and asexual speciation invalidates
    it
  • Gene flow may not be frequent or substantial
    among populations of many species in nature, but
    any gene flow is rejected
  • Crossing experiments in the laboratory do not
    accurately portray the ability to interbreed in
    nature
  • Products of ecological speciation would not be
    recognized (e.g., all members of the white oak
    subgenus 1 species)

9
Species Concepts
  • Phylogenetic (in the broad sense)
  • Several closely related concepts differing in how
    to distinguish taxa and clades
  • diagnosability" of species based on one or more
    unique traits
  • coalescence of populations (gene flow) and
    divergent populations

10
Species Concepts
  • Phylogenetic (cont.)
  • Problems
  • Require discrete characteristics--eliminates
    continuous variation from consideration
  • Evolutionary pattern must be strictly
    bifurcating, with common ancestor and 2 or more
    descendants (sister species)
  • progenitor-derivative pairs excluded
  • reticulation (anything involving hybridization)
    excluded

11
Species Concepts
  • Phylogenetic (cont.)
  • Problems (cont.)
  • Some cladistic approaches recognize only
    monophyletic taxa (most recent common ancestor
    and all of its descendants)forbids founder and
    peripheral isolates models, etc.
  • Dynamics at the population-species interface pose
    special problems of methodology, sampling and
    types of data necessary

12
Species Concepts
  • Evolutionary
  • "An evolutionary species is a lineage an
    ancestral-descendant sequence of populations
    evolving separately from others and with its own
    unitary evolutionary role and tendencies" (George
    Simpson)
  • Circumvents problems with application of
    biological species concept, permits some
    hybridization where this does not compromise
    "species integrity" overall

13
Species Concepts
  • Evolutionary (cont.)
  • Inserts a time perspective, and stresses species
    as sets of populations with independent
    "evolutionary trajectories" from other sets of
    populations
  • Allows for combination of morphological and
    utilitarian aspects of biological species
    concept may include phenotypic data, phenology,
    ecology, pollen fertility, chromosome
    numberscircumstantial data OK

14
Species Concepts
  • Ecological
  • "A species is a lineage (or a closely related set
    of lineages) which occupies an adaptive zone
    minimally different from that of any other
    lineage in its range and which evolves separately
    from all lineages outside its range" (Van Valen)
  • Permits hybridization, as long as "species
    integrity" is not compromised

15
Species Concepts
  • Ecological (cont.)
  • Really examines recognition of evolutionary
    units from the plants perspective, rather than
    imposing a human construct on biodiversity
  • Problems
  • Assumes investigations (at least accumulation of
    circumstantial observations) on other aspects of
    organisms, including cytogenetics, ecology and
    physiology, as these involve potential isolation
    mechanisms
  • So, not practical for floristicians but probably
    the most flexible species concept

16
Restricted Concepts
  • Phenetic
  • Set of individuals with a high degree of overall
    morphological similarity, separated by a
    morphological gulf from all other sets of
    individuals
  • May be only efficient approach with hybrid
    apomictic complexes to order diversity, e.g.,
    blackberries (Rubus), hawthorn (Crataegus)

17
Restricted Concepts
  • Phenetic (cont.)
  • Problems
  • No other evidence used in formation of "species
    often loses information where polyploidy or other
    processes are involved
  • Doesnt always easily accommodate some
    qualitative traits
  • If no broad morphological gulf can be detected,
    where is the line drawn?

18
Restricted Concepts
  • Genetic
  • Groups of populations with high genetic identity
  • Really a phenetic concept using genetic distance,
    where population-level markers are examined
  • In some algae (e.g., Batrachospermales), where
    morphology provides few characters, divergence in
    DNA sequences used by some to infer species
    break points
  • Also essential in bacteria and other groups

19
Restricted Concepts
  • Paleontological
  • Relies on fossil data, involves a time scale
  • Paleospecies, chronospecies, etc., to reflect the
    status of an evolutionary lineage at a particular
    time in the fossil record
  • Problem--where the fossil record is good, there
    may be few or no abrupt discontinuities among
    transitional forms!

20
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Taxonomy (incl. nomenclature)
  • Characterizes the smallest consistently
    detectable (and "useable") units e.g.,
    species, subspecies, varieties, forms
  • Taxa are consistently morphologically distinct,
    without us of special equipment (beyond a hand
    lens)
  • Gives distinct taxa stable names

21
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Taxonomy (cont.)
  • Groups individuals into populations, populations
    into species, etc., based on overall similarity
    in an attempt to order biological diversity in a
    convenient and informative way
  • Floristicians and monographers practice this
    approach by default cladists use this initially
    (even though they may be embarrassed to admit it)

22
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Evolutionary inference
  • Relates populations to species, species to
    lineages, etc.
  • Evolutionary species are distinct when they
    retain their individuality or integrity and are
    on their own evolutionary trajectory from related
    taxa
  • Attempts to explain the events and forces that
    have created and maintained sets of organisms

23
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Evolutionary inference (cont.)
  • Puts the history of these organisms into a
    geological or historical context
  • Accounts for origination of an organism's biology
    and life history traits
  • Evolutionary biologist and many systematists use
    this

24
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Phylogenetic/cladistic classification
  • Groups individuals into populations, populations
    into species, species into higher-level taxa
  • Taxa (at least above the species level) must be a
    natural group (monophyletic), or clade, to be
    recognized at all species in some cladistic
    systems are those with at least one consistently
    diagnosable trait distinguishing them from
    relatives

25
Perspectives on Biological Diversity
  • Phylogenetic/cladistic classification (cont.)
  • Attempts to put biological diversity within a
    larger phylogenetic framework of hypothetical
    ancestor and descendants (essentially, a
    classification)
  • Used by many systematists, at least above the
    species level

26
Conflicts Among Perspectives
  • These 3 perspectives, or languages represent
    overlapping but non-correspondent views with
    different aims, using different types of data and
    analytical approaches
  • Taxonomy clashes with evolutionary inference
  • One single species concept (including the
    morphological one) cannot successfully explain
    biological diversity in every plant group, or
    even in most of them
  • Taxonomy must use a "utilitarian"
    characterization of biodiversity based on
    exophenotypic traits but "endophenotypic" or
    molecular variation is ignored

27
Conflicts Among Perspectives
  • Taxonomy clashes with evolutionary inference
    (cont.)
  • Plants evolve in numerous ways, some of which are
    probably not at all understood
  • Taxonomy using gross morphological traits will
    obscure some evolutionary species e.g.,
    allopolyploids, asexual species, even
    ecologically or reproductively isolated species
  • Unfortunately, absence of evolutionary data for
    most plant groups forces the use of a
    morphological (or phenetic) species concept ?
    underestimation of biological diversity

28
Conflicts Among Perspectives
  • Phylogenetic/cladistic classification conflicts
    with evolutionary inference
  • Requirement of monophyly at the population level
    (by some cladists) or species level (by others)
    ignores founder effect and peripheral isolates
    speciation models
  • Asexual and polytypic species concepts, and those
    invoking hybridization, violate theoretical
    assumptions

29
Conflicts Among Perspectives
  • Prerequisite assumptions reject most of the
    accepted speciation models
  • Evolution proceeds parsimoniously (used in
    maximum parsimony criterion for choosing best
    phylogeny)
  • Assumes that a trait evolves through the fewest
    number of stepwise changes
  • But, we believe increasingly in the
    stochasticity or evolutionary processes, with
    many examples of phenotypic evolution NOT
    proceeding through the simplest series of steps

30
Conflicts Among Perspectives
  • Prerequisite assumptions (cont.)
  • Evolution always results in sister species from a
    common ancestor (which then disappears)
  • Cannot accommodate evolutionary taxa produced by
    most of the known speciation models works well
    mainly for classic allopatric model
  • While this may work for animals, plants evolve by
    diverse mechanisms including hybridization,
    polyploidy and asexual meanscladistic concepts
    fail

31
Growing Agreement
  • More than one concept may be applied for
    different species within each group or lineage
    ("pluralistic" approach)
  • One species concept may fail to adequately
    accommodate all evolutionary diversity, so may
    need to apply 2 or more for any given taxon to
    characterize detectable patterns of variation in
    nature

32
Bibliography
  • Baum, D. A. and M. J. Donoghue. 1995. Choosing
    among alternative "phylogenetic" species
    concepts. Systematic Botany 20560-573
  • Davis, J. I. 1995. Species concepts and
    phylogenetic analysis--Introduction. Systematic
    Botany 20555-559
  • Luckow, M. 1995. Species concepts Assumptions,
    methods and applications. Systematic Botany
    20589-605
  • McDade, L. A. 1995. Species concepts and problems
    in practice Insight from botanical monographs.
    Systematic Botany 20606-622

33
Bibliography
  • Olmstead, R. G. 1995. Species concepts and
    plesiomorphic species. Systematic Botany
    20623-630
  • Rieseberg, L. and L. Brouillet. 1994. Are many
    plant species paraphyletic? Taxon 4321-32
  • Stuessy, T. F. 1990. Plant Taxonomy The
    systematic evaluation of comparative data.
    Columbia University Press, New York, New York.
    514 pp.
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