Speciation - Building Directory
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Transcript Speciation - Building Directory
Speciation
Speciation
Speciation is the origin of new species
A species is a population or group of
populations whose members have the potential
to interbreed with one another in nature and
produces viable, fertile offspring
This definition works only for sexually-reproducing
individuals
Diversity Within A Species
There is much
diversity within a
species
A businesswoman in
Manhattan could
produce offspring with a
dairyman in Mongolia
Reproductive Barriers
Reproductive barriers prevent organisms from
two different species from producing viable,
fertile offspring
Prezygotic Barriers
Prevent mating between species
Do not allow the egg to be fertilized if members of
different species attempt to mate
Postzygotic Barriers
Prevent the zygote from developing into a viable, fertile
adult if the egg does become fertilized
Prezygotic Barriers
Habitat Isolation
Species that live in
different habitats within
the same area will
rarely (if ever)
encounter one another
Behavioral Isolation
Special signals that
attract mates are
species-specific
Ie. courtship rituals
Prezygotic Barriers
Temporal Isolation
Species that breed during different times of the day,
different seasons, or different years cannot mix their
gametes
Mechanical Isolation
Anatomically incompatible species
Gametic Isolation
Sperm of one species can’t survive in the female
reproductive tract of another species
Ova may only recognize sperm of their own species
Postzygotic Barriers
Reduced Hybrid Viability
Offspring dies during embryonic development
Reduced Hybrid Fertility
Even if hybrids survive, they are usually sterile
Mule – horse & donkey
Hybrid Breakdown
Even if the first generation is fertile and viable,
offspring of the first generation is infertile
Modes of Speciation
1. Allopatric Speciation
Speciation that occurs based on the
geographic relationship of a new species to
its ancestral species (Geographic barrier
separates organisms).
2. Sympatric Speciation
Speciation that occurs when a subpopulation
becomes reproductively isolated in the midst
of its parent population (No geographic
barrier)
Modes of Speciation
Allopatric Speciation
Occurs as a result of
geographical
isolation
Mountain range, river,
etc.
Example: different
species of closelyrelated squirrels on
opposite rims of the
Grand Canyon
Adaptive Radiation
Adaptive radiation is
the evolution of many
diversely adapted
species from a
common ancestor
Darwin’s finches
Especially common on
island chains
(Galapagos, Hawaiian
islands)
Sympatric Speciation
Sympatric speciation
occurs when new
species arise within
the range of the
parent population
Reproductive isolation
evolves without
geographical isolation
Sympatric Speciation
Animals may become reproductively
isolated within the geographical range of a
parent population if genetic factors cause
them to become fixed on resources not
used by the parent population
Different food source, different breeding
grounds, etc.
This sets the stage for speciation to occur
The Tempo of Speciation
There are 2 alternate
views of how quickly
speciation occurs:
Gradualism
Punctuated Equilibrium
Gradualism
Species, descended
from a common
ancestor, diverge
more and more in
morphology as they
acquire unique
adaptations
Punctuated Equilibrium
A new species
changes most as it
“buds” from a parent
species and then
changes little for the
rest of its existence