Top Banner
Chapter 23 The Origin of Species
60

Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Jan 16, 2016

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Chapter 23The Origin of

Species

Page 2: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Question?

What is a species? Comment - Evolution theory

must also explain how species originate.

Page 3: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Two Concepts of Species

1. Morphospecies

2. Biological Species

Page 4: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Morphospecies

Organisms with very similar morphology or physical form.

Page 5: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Problem Where does extensive

phenotype variation fit?

Page 6: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Two Schools

1. Splitters - Break apart species into new ones on the basis of small phenotype changes.

2. Lumpers - Group many phenotype variants into one species.

Page 7: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Biological Species

A group of organisms that could interbreed in nature and produce fertile offspring.

Page 8: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Key Points

Could interbreed. Fertile offspring.

Heaven Scent

an F1 hybrid between 2 species, but sterile.

Page 9: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Morphospecies & Biological Species

Often overlap. Serve different purposes.

Page 10: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

African Violets Originally ~20 species 70,000 cultivars

Page 11: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Problem What is a species? Some plants didn’t fit placement. Plants freely interbreed. Answer – coming up later

Page 12: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Speciation Requires:

1. Variation in the population.

2. Selection.

3. Isolation.

Page 13: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Reproductive Barriers

Serve to isolate a populations from other gene pools.

Create and maintain “species”.

Page 14: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Main Types of Barriers

Prezygotic - Prevent mating or fertilization.

Postzygotic - Prevent viable, fertile offspring.

Page 15: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Prezygotic - Types

1. Habitat Isolation

2. Behavioral Isolation

3. Temporal Isolation

4. Mechanical Isolation

5. Gametic Isolation

Page 16: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Habitat Isolation

Populations live in different habitats or ecological niches.

Ex – mountains vs lowlands.

Page 17: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Behavioral Isolation

Mating or courtship behaviors different.

Different sexual attractions operating.

Ex – songs and dances in birds.

Page 18: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Temporal Isolation

Breeding seasons or time of day different.

Ex – flowers open in morning or evening.

Page 19: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Mechanical Isolation Structural differences that

prevent gamete transfer. Ex – anthers not positioned

to put pollen on a bee, but will put pollen on a bird.

Page 20: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Gametic Isolation

Gametes fail to attract each other and fuse.

Ex – chemical markers on egg and sperm fail to match.

Page 21: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Postzygotic Types

1. Reduced Hybrid Viability

2. Reduced Hybrid Fertility

3. Hybrid Breakdown

Page 22: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Reduced Hybrid Viability

Zygote fails to develop or mature.

Ex – when different species of frogs hybridize.

Page 23: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Reduced Hybrid Fertility

Hybrids are viable, but can't reproduce sexually.

Chromosome count often “odd” so meiosis won’t work.

Ex - mules

Page 24: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Hybrid Breakdown

Offspring are fertile, but can't compete successfully with the “pure breeds”.

Ex – many plant hybrids

Page 25: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Modes of Speciation

1. Allopatric Speciation

2. Sympatric Speciation

Both work through a block of gene flow between two populations.

Page 26: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.
Page 27: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Allopatric Speciation

Allopatric = other homeland Ancestral population split by

a geographical feature. Comment – the size of the

geographical feature may be very large or small.

Page 28: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Example

Pupfish populations in Death Valley.

Generally happens when a specie’s range shrinks for some reason.

Page 29: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation

1. Founder's Effect - with the peripheral isolate.

2. Genetic Drift – gives the isolate population variation as compared to the original population.

Page 30: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation

3. Selection pressure on the isolate differs from the parent population.

Page 31: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Result

Gene pool of isolate changes from the parent population.

New Species can form.

Page 32: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Comment

Populations separated by geographical barriers may not evolve much.

Ex - Pacific and Atlantic Ocean populations separated by the Panama Isthmus.

Page 33: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Examples

Fish - 72 identical kinds. Crabs - 25 identical kinds. Echinoderms - 25 identical

kinds.

Page 34: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Adaptive Radiation

Rapid emergence of several species from a common ancestor (Allopatric speciation)

Common in island and mountain top populations or other “empty” environments.

Page 35: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Mechanism

Resources are temporarily infinite.

Most offspring survive. Result - little Natural

Selection and the gene pool can become very diverse.

Page 36: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

When the Environment Saturates

Natural Selection resumes. New species form rapidly if

isolation mechanisms work.

Page 37: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Examples

Galapagos – Finches Usambaras Mountains –

African violets

Page 38: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Sympatric Speciation

Sympatric = same homeland New species arise within the

range of parent populations. Can occur In a single

generation.

Page 39: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.
Page 40: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Gradualism Evolution

Darwinian style evolution. Small gradual changes over

long periods time.

Page 41: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Gradualism Predicts:

Long periods of time are needed for evolution.

Fossils should show continuous links.

Page 42: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Problem

Gradualism doesn’t fit the fossil record very well. (too many “gaps”).

Page 43: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Punctuated Evolution

theory that deals with the “pacing” of evolution.

Elridge and Gould – 1972.

Page 44: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Punctuated Equilibrium

Evolution has two speeds of change: Gradualism or slow change Rapid bursts of speciation

Page 45: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Predictions

Speciation can occur over a very short period of time (1 to 1000 generations).

Fossil record will have gaps or missing links.

Page 46: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.
Page 47: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Predictions

New species will appear in the fossil record without connecting links or intermediate forms.

Established species will show gradual changes over long periods of time.

Page 48: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Possible Mechanism

Adaptive Radiation, especially after mass extinction events allow new species to originate.

Saturated environments favor gradual changes in the current species.

Page 49: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Comment

Punctuated Equilibrium is the newest ”Evolution Theory”.

Best explanation of fossil record evidence to date.

Page 50: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Origin of Evolutionary Novelty

How do macroevolution changes originate?

Several ideas discussed in textbook (read them) Exaptation Heterochrony Homeosis

Page 51: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Another idea

Mutations in developmental or control genes (Chapter 21)

Looking very promising as a source of macroevolution

Page 52: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Ex - Homeosis

Changes in the basic body design or arrangement of body parts.

Ex. – Hox gene clusters that gave rise to vertebrates from invertebrates.

Page 53: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.
Page 54: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Gene Duplications

Allow genes to be used for other functions such as in the previous slide.

Many other examples are known.

Page 55: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Future of Evolution ?

Look for new theories and ideas to be developed, especially from new fossil finds and from molecular (DNA) evidence.

Page 56: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Evolutionary Trends

Evolution is not goal oriented. It does not produce “perfect” species.

Remember – species survive because of their adaptations. They don’t adapt to survive.

Page 57: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.
Page 58: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Summary

Be able to discuss the main theories of what is a “species”.

Know various reproductive barriers and examples.

Page 59: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Summary

Know allopatric and sympatric speciation.

Be able to discuss gradualism and punctuated equilibrium theories.

Page 60: Chapter 23 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate.

Summary

Recognize various ideas about the origin of evolutionary novelties.