21
Speciation The Process of Evolution

Evolution

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Evolution

SpeciationThe Process of

Evolution

Page 2: Evolution

Speciation• Formation of a new species• Species:

– a population that can breed freely and produce fertile offspring

• Speciation often occurs when part of the population is isolated from another part– Selective pressures of the environment in

one area may be different from pressures in another area

Page 3: Evolution

What is a Species?• Definition :• Morphospecies - based on appearance• Biologic species - a population that can

breed freely and produce fertile offspring• The largest unit of population in which gene

flow is possible• Limitations:

– doesn’t work for asexual organisms– extinct life forms– populations that are geographically isolated -

sometimes call subspecies• No clear answer; idea is arbitrary

Page 4: Evolution

Patterns of Speciation• Fossil record shows 2 patterns:• Anagenesis (phyletic evolution)

– the transformation of an unbranched lineage of organisms, sometimes creating an organism different enough to be a new species

• Cladogenesis – branching evolution; budding of one or

more new species from a parent species that continues to exist.

Page 5: Evolution

Anagenesis vs. Cladogenesis

Page 6: Evolution

Causes of Speciation• Speciation often occurs when part of the

population is isolated from another part• Geographic Isolation

– most common– a physical barrier develops (changing

course of a river; separation of an island)– Selective pressures in one area are different

from pressures in another area• Reproductive Isolation

– another form of isolation

Page 7: Evolution

Isolation

Page 8: Evolution

Geographic Isolation• Biogeography of Speciation • Classified according to geographic relationship

between new and old species• Sympatric

– population becomes reproductively isolated in the midst of the parent population

– ranges of new and old species overlap.• Allopatric

– species are physically separated– more likely in small populations

• Adaptive radiation is allopatric :– emergence of numerous species from a common

ancestor that spreads to several new environments.

Page 9: Evolution

Allopatric vs. Sympatric

Page 10: Evolution

Allopatric Barriers

Page 11: Evolution

Geographic Isolation

Page 12: Evolution

Reproductive Isolation• Example: organisms breed at

different times• Reproductive barriers are of 2 types:• Prezygotic

– before the formation of fertilized eggs– impedes mating or fertilization

• Postzygotic – after

Page 13: Evolution

Reproductive Isolation

Page 14: Evolution

Prezygotic Isolation• Impedes mating or fertilization• Habitat isolation

– not geographically separated, but occupy different niches within an area, e.g. trees versus ground

• Temporal isolation – breed at different times

• Behavioral isolation– don’t produce appropriate courtship signals

• Mechanical isolation – anatomically incompatible

• Gametic isolation – mating occurs but gametes rarely fuse to form

zygotes

Page 15: Evolution

Behavioral Isolation: Courtship Barrier

Page 16: Evolution

Postzygotic Barriers• Hybrid inviability

– offspring don’t make it• Hybrid sterility

– e.g. mules• Hybrid breakdown

– F2 are sterile or weak

Page 17: Evolution

Introgression• Alleles pass a reproductive barrier

when a fertile hybrid mates with a parent species

• Increases variation• Rare

– 2 species remain distinct

Page 18: Evolution

Post Speciation Evolution• Divergent Evolution

– Process by which related organisms become less alike

– occurs after speciation– at first 2 new species are very similar, but

over time become more & more different.• Adaptive radiation is a special type of

divergent evolution– Many new species from a single parent

species

Page 19: Evolution

Adaptive Radiation

Page 20: Evolution

Timing of Evolution• Most scientists accept natural selection as the

process of evolution• The timing is controversial• Gradualism

– the traditional view– a slow, steady accumulation of changes, leads to

new species• Punctuated Equilibrium

– long periods of inactivity followed by big jumps• Fossil record provides evidence that the pace of

evolution varies– The same evidence is used to support different ideas– Could be some of both

Page 21: Evolution

Gradualism vs. Punctuated Equilibrium