The Origin of Species - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Origin of Species

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The Origin of Species Two basic patterns of evolutionary change can be distinguished Anagenesis Cladogenesis Origin of Species How do we define species? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Origin of Species


1
The Origin of Species
2
  • Two basic patterns of evolutionary change can be
    distinguished
  • Anagenesis
  • Cladogenesis

3
Origin of Species
  • How do we define species?
  • A population of organisms that produces viable
    fertile offspring in nature
  • When does this definition fall apart?
  • Asexual, extinct and blurred organisms
  • What definition is used in these cases?
  • Morphospecies concept

4
  • What is the driving factor behind speciation
  • (what event must happen to produce a new
  • species)?
  • Reproductive isolation
  • Pre-zygotic
  • Temporal isolation
  • Behavioral/sexual isolation
  • Mechanical isolation
  • Gametic isolation
  • Post-zygotic
  • Hybrid inviability
  • Hybrids may not be able to reproduce due to
    differences in courtship behaviors, sterility
    (chromosomes may be incompatible with meiosis)
  • Hybrid breakdown

5
Pre-Zygotic Barriers
6
Post-Zygotic Barriers
7
  • Which type of reproductive isolation mechanism is
    at work?
  • Firefly signals with specific flashes to attract
    mates
  • Male dragonfly has appendages that clasps female
    during mating
  • Brown trout breed in the fall and rainbow trout
    in the spring
  • 1 type of garter snakes lives in the water and
    the other lives on land

8
What sort of reproductive barrier is this?
Prezygotic
Has reproductive isolation occurred?
9
  • Horse and donkey produce a sterile mule

10
Biogeography of Speciation
  • What is the difference between
  • allopatric and sympatric speciation?
  • Allopatric - involves a geographical barrier
    between 2 groups
  • Sympatric - the result of a genetic isolation
    without a geographical barrier

11
Conditions for Allopatry
  • Long physical isolation and different selective
    pressures
  • Populations of a species become separated
    geographically and undergo genetic drift
    natural selection
  • Genetic drift continues to change gene pool
  • The fittest traits among the new group survive

12
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13
  • Allopatric speciation may occur relatively
    rapidly
  • Kaibab squirrel is an example of allopatric
    speciation in progress
  • Separated by the Grand Canyon
  • Show marked phenotypic differences

14
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15
Ring Species
  • Examples of various stages in the gradual
    divergence of new species from common ancestors
  • Pops are distributed around some geographic
    barrier
  • Pops that have diverged the most meet where the
    ring closes
  • Some populations can interbreed, others cant

16
Ring Species
17
Adaptive Radiation
  • Islands are laboratories of speciation
  • Adaptive radiation is the evolution of diversely
    adapted species from a common ancestor upon
    introduction to new environmental opportunities
  • Archipelagos are the often the home of adaptive
    radiations

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20
Hawaiian Archipelago
21
Sympatric Speciation
  • Genetic alterations result in a reproductive
    barrier
  • Can occur in a single generation
  • More frequently seen in plants
  • Nondisjunction and selfing leads to polyploidy
  • Autopolyploid
  • Alloployploid
  • Evolution of wheat

22
Sympatric Speciation in Animals
normal light
monochromatic light
  • Cichlid fish - resulted from sexual selection
  • Genetic divergence between species is likely to
    be small, suggesting that speciation in nature
    has occurred relatively recently

200 species of cichlid fishes in Lake Victoria,
Africa!
23
Genetic Mechanisms of Speciation
  • Adaptive Divergence
  • Reproductive barriers evolve as secondary result
    of divergence
  • Barriers evolve to enhance reproduction within a
    group - not to eliminate reproduction b/t groups
  • Barriers occur as a side effect of the
    accumulated adaptive divergences

24
Tempo of Speciation
  • Gradualism
  • Punctuated Equilibrium

25
From Speciation to Macroevolution
  • Speciation the boundary between micro and
    macroevolution
  • Cumulative change over vast amounts of time
    accounts for macroevoulution
  • How do evolutionary novelties evolve?

26
Eye Evolution
27
Origin of Novelties
  • How do large scale novelties arise?
  • Exaptation - modifications of older structures
  • Pandas thumb, stinger of bees, etc
  • Gen. changes that lead to dev. changes
  • Allometric growth rel. rates of growth differ
  • Change one stage - big change
  • Alter timing of developmental events, (age of
    sexual activity)
  • Alteration in homeotic genes
  • Evolution, however, is not goal oriented

28
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29
An individual that has more than two chromosome
sets, all derived from a single species
30
A species with multiple sets of chromosomes
derived from different species
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34
  • Tetrapod evolution
  • Fish Hox gene leads to fin development
  • Chicken same Hox gene leads to leg development

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