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Chapter 24 The Origin of Species Part B
43

Chapter 24 The Origin of Species Part B

Feb 24, 2016

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Chapter 24 The Origin of Species Part B. How do species occur? Concept 24.2: Speciation can take place with or without geographic separation. Speciation can occur in two ways: Allopatric speciation Sympatric speciation Both work through a block of gene flow between two populations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Chapter 24The Origin of

SpeciesPart B

Page 2: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

How do species occur?Concept 24.2: Speciation can take place with or without geographic

separation

• Speciation can occur in two ways:–Allopatric speciation–Sympatric speciation

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

Page 3: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Example• Pupfish populations in Death

Valley.• Generally happens when a

specie’s range shrinks for some reason.

Page 4: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-5

(a) Allopatric speciation (b) Sympatric speciation

Page 5: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B
Page 6: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

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 7: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

The Process of Allopatric Speciation

• In allopatric speciation, gene flow is interrupted or reduced when a population is divided into geographically isolated subpopulations

• The definition of barrier depends on the ability of a population to disperse

• Separate populations may evolve independently through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift

Page 8: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-6

A. harrisi A. leucurus

Page 9: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Evidence of Allopatric Speciation

• Regions with many geographic barriers typically have more species than do regions with fewer barriers

Page 10: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-7

Mantellinae(Madagascar only):100 species

Rhacophorinae(India/SoutheastAsia): 310 species

Other Indian/Southeast Asianfrogs

Millions of years ago (mya)1 2 3

1 2 3

100 80 60 40 20 0

88 mya 65 mya 56 mya

India

Madagascar

Page 11: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

• Reproductive isolation between populations generally increases as the distance between them increases

Page 12: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-8

Geographic distance (km)

Degr

ee o

f rep

rodu

ctive

isol

ation

00

50 100 150 250200 300

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

Page 13: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

• Barriers to reproduction are intrinsic; separation itself is not a biological barrier

Page 14: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-9a

EXPERIMENT

Initial population

Some fliesraised on

starch medium Mating experimentsafter 40 generations

Some fliesraised on

maltose medium

Page 15: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-9b

RESULTS

FemaleFemale

StarchStarch Starch

Maltose population 1 population 2

Mal

e Star

chM

alto

se Mal

eSt

arch

Star

chpo

pula

tion

1po

pula

tion

2

22

8 20

9 18

12

15

15

Mating frequenciesin experimental group

Mating frequenciesin control group

Page 16: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

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 17: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Conditions Favoring Allopatric Speciation

3. Selection pressure on the isolate differs from the parent population. (environment is different on the edges)

Page 18: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Result• Gene pool of isolate changes

from the parent population and new species can form.

Page 19: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Sympatric Speciation• Sympatric = same homeland• New species arise within the range

of parent populations.• Can occur in a single generation.• In sympatric speciation,

speciation takes place in geographically overlapping populations

Page 20: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B
Page 21: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Plants• Polyploids may cause new

species because the change in chromosome number creates postzygotic barriers.

Page 22: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Polyploidy

• Polyploidy is the presence of extra sets of chromosomes due to accidents during cell division• An autopolyploid is an

individual with more than two chromosome sets, derived from one species

Page 23: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Polyploid Types1. Autopolyploid - when a

species doubles its chromosome number from 2N to 4N.

2. Allopolyploid - formed as a polyploid hybrid between two species.–Ex: wheat

Page 24: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-10-1

2n = 6 4n = 12

Failure of celldivision afterchromosomeduplication givesrise to tetraploidtissue.

Autopolyploid

Page 25: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-10-2

2n = 6 4n = 12

Failure of celldivision afterchromosomeduplication givesrise to tetraploidtissue.

2n

Gametesproducedare diploid..

Autopolyploid

Page 26: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-10-3

2n = 6 4n = 12

Failure of celldivision afterchromosomeduplication givesrise to tetraploidtissue.

2n

Gametesproducedare diploid..

4n

Offspring withtetraploidkaryotypes maybe viable andfertile.

Autopolyploid

Page 27: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Autopolyploid

Page 28: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

• An allopolyploid is a species with multiple sets of chromosomes derived from different species

Page 29: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-11-1

Species A2n = 6

Normalgameten = 3

Meioticerror

Species B2n = 4

Unreducedgametewith 4chromosomes

allopolyploid

Page 30: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-11-2

Species A2n = 6

Normalgameten = 3

Meioticerror

Species B2n = 4

Unreducedgametewith 4chromosomes

Hybridwith 7chromosomes

allopolyploid

Page 31: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-11-3

Species A2n = 6

Normalgameten = 3

Meioticerror

Species B2n = 4

Unreducedgametewith 4chromosomes

Hybridwith 7chromosomes

Unreducedgametewith 7chromosomes

Normalgameten = 3

allopolyploid

Page 32: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-11-4

Species A2n = 6

Normalgameten = 3

Meioticerror

Species B2n = 4

Unreducedgametewith 4chromosomes

Hybridwith 7chromosomes

Unreducedgametewith 7chromosomes

Normalgameten = 3

Viable fertilehybrid(allopolyploid)2n = 10

allopolyploid

Page 33: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Allopolyploid

Page 34: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

• Polyploidy is much more common in plants than in animals• Many important crops (oats,

cotton, potatoes, tobacco, and wheat) are polyploids

Page 35: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Habitat Differentiation• Sympatric speciation can also

result from the appearance of new ecological niches• For example, the North

American maggot fly can live on native hawthorn trees as well as more recently introduced apple trees

Page 36: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Sexual Selection• Sexual selection can drive

sympatric speciation• Sexual selection for mates of

different colors has likely contributed to the speciation in cichlid fish in Lake Victoria

Page 37: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Fig. 24-12

EXPERIMENT

Normal lightMonochromatic

orange light

P.pundamilia

P. nyererei

Page 38: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Allopatric and Sympatric Speciation: A Review

• In allopatric speciation, geographic isolation restricts gene flow between populations

• Reproductive isolation may then arise by natural selection, genetic drift, or sexual selection in the isolated populations

• Even if contact is restored between populations, interbreeding is prevented

Page 39: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

• In sympatric speciation, a reproductive barrier isolates a subset of a population without geographic separation from the parent species

• Sympatric speciation can result from polyploidy, natural selection, or sexual selection

Page 40: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Adaptive Radiation• Rapid emergence of several

species from a common ancestor ( often Allopatric speciation)

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

Page 41: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

Mechanism• Resources are temporarily

infinite.• Most offspring survive.• Result - little Natural

Selection and the gene pool can become very diverse.

Page 42: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

When the Environment Saturates

• Natural Selection resumes.• New species form rapidly if

isolation mechanisms work.• Examples–Galapagos – Finches–Usambaras Mountains – African violets

Page 43: Chapter 24 The Origin of  Species Part B

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