Macroevolution: How Do Species Evolve? Chapter 17.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 24 Species & Speciation.
Advertisements

Macroevolution: Evolution of a New Species
THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES CHAPTER 24.
(c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Examine how life continues to evolve within a changing environment
Evolution – Formation of New Species What is a species? Biological species concept - groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively.
CHAPTER 14 The Origin of Species
Prebiotic Evolution Chapter 18. Until about 300 years ago people believed in the idea of spontaneous generation – that life comes from non-living material.
Chapter 17 – Evolution of Populations
1 The Origin of Species Chapter Outline The Nature of Species Pre and Postzygotic Isolating Mechanisms Geography of Speciation Hawaiian Drosophila.
Chapter 24 Notes The Origin of Species. There is more to evolution than just explaining how adaptations evolve in a population. Evolution must also explain.
THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. HOW DOES EVOLUTION LEAD TO THE FORMATION OF ALL THE DIFFERENT ORGANISMS, OR SPECIES, WE SEE ON THE PLANET? FIRST WE MUST DEFINE.
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species.
Origin of Species The term species refers to individuals in a population that are free to breed and that produce viable offspring, without outside intervention,
Origin of Species The term species refers to individuals in a population that are free to breed and that produce viable offspring, without outside intervention,
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species. Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Speciation = origin of new species.
Speciation. What is Speciation? How does speciation occur? The formation of a species; when two or more species are created from an ancestral group Occurs.
Chapter 13 Population Genetics. Question? u How did the diversity of life originate? u Through the process of Evolution.
Chapter 18 Speciation. What is a Species? The morphological species concept expresses the following: – Species, in its simplest interpretation means “kind”
Adaptation and Speciation Adaptation and Speciation SBI 3U.
Chapter 24 ~Macroevolution Origin of Species. What is a species? A population whose members have the potential to interbreed and produce viable, fertile.
Chapter 19 Changes in Species. Speciation Q: When are two populations new species? A: When populations no longer interbreed they are thought to be separate.
AP Biology Exam Review Evolution.
The Origin of Species Speciation. Speciation is the process by which one species splits into two or more species Speciation explains the features shared.
 Adaptation – describes any trait that enhances an organisms fitness or increases its chance of survival.  While adaptations are products of natural.
Outstanding Origin of Species Ch 24. Vocabulary  1. Macroevolution – origin of new taxonomic groups (new species, genera, families etc)  2. Speciation.
Ch 24 – Origin of Species. Overview: The “Mystery of Mysteries” Overview: The “Mystery of Mysteries” Darwin explored the Galápagos Islands Darwin explored.
Part 2 Evolution Notes. Natural Selection and Macroevolution Natural Selection shapes a population, making it adapted to its current environment. This.
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species. Question? u What is a species? u Comment - Evolution theory must also explain how species originate. u Darwin’s “Mystery.
Process of Speciation. –In the 150 years since the publication of Darwin’s book On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, new discoveries.
Chapter 14- Origin of Species Adaptive radiation Allopatric speciation Behavioral isolation Biological species concept Ecological species concept Gametic.
1 Origin of Species Chapter What you need to know! The difference between microevolution and macroevolution. The biological concept of species.
Speciation – How Species Form Section 9.2. Species  Physiology, biochemistry, behaviour, and genetics are used to distinguish one species from another.
Chapter 17: Evolution of Populations Section 17-3: The Process of Speciation.
ORIGIN OF SPECIES CH 24. Speciation: origin of new species Microevolution: changes in allele frequencies Macroevolution: changes that result in formation.
What is a Species? Biological species = A population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed with one another in nature.
Macroevolution: Investigating the Origin of Species *Adapted from Macroevolution lecture at ccbcmd.edu.
{ Evolution & Speciation Mechanisms & Models Quizlet:
Evolution Natural Selection Evolution of Populations Microevolution vs. Macroevolution.
Macroevolution and the Definition of Species. Overview: That “Mystery of Mysteries” In the Galápagos Islands Darwin discovered plants and animals found.
{ HOW BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY EVOLVES Chapter 14. { THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES Chapter 14.1.
Speciation. Learning objective SWBAT: Describe and identify the various types of reproductive isolation necessary for the formation of new species according.
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species. Speciation – The process whereby members of one species become another species – A species can evolve through time without.
Speciation. Speciation is the origin of new species  A species is a population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed.
OBJECTIVES: 1) EXPLAIN WHY DEFINING SPECIES IS DIFFICULT 2) IDENTIFY CAUSES OF SPECIATION 3) DESCRIBE MACROEVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES/PATTERNS SPECIATION &
Speciation. What is a species? Biological species concept – a population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed in nature.
14.1 to The biological species concept states that a species is a group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed in nature.
1.C.2 Reproductive Isolation Speciation may occur when two populations become reproductively isolated from each other.
Essential knowledge 1.C.1:_
What is a Species? Biological species = A population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed with one another in nature.
Where did all the species come from?
Speciation Chapter 14 March 2014.
The Origin of Species Chapter 24.
The Origin of Species.
Evidence of Evolution.
1.7: Speciation and extinction have occurred throughout the Earth’s history. 1. SPECIATION CONCEPTS.
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species.
Chapter 24 The Origin of Species.
How do we create new species? How do old species become extinct?
Reproductive Barriers
CHAPTER 24 THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES.
the formation of new species
The Origin of Species Chapter 24.
Chapter 24 Notes The Origin of Species.
Formation of Species 16.3 pp
Essential knowledge 1.C.1:_
EVOLUTION & SPECIATION
Outstanding Origin of Species
Speciation: The Origin of New Species
Presentation transcript:

Macroevolution: How Do Species Evolve? Chapter 17

Macroevolution The origin, multiplication and extinction of species and higher groups of organisms. Speciation – the formation of new species. The species seen on the Galapagos islands had all descended from mainland species, but had changed over time and become unique to each island.

What is a species? Over 1.7 million species identified. Most of these species were named and grouped according to a few observable (physical) characteristics Morphological species

“Think about it, Ed….The class Insecta contains 26 orders, almost 1,000 families, and over 750,000 described species --- but I can’t shake the feeling we’re all just a bunch of bugs.”

Biological Species Concept Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding populations, which are reproductively isolated from other such groups. No matter how extensive the phenotypic variation, individuals will remain members of the same species as long as their form, physiology and behavior permit them to interbreed and produce fertile offspring.

Problems with the biological species concept. What about organisms that reproduce asexually (yeast, bacteria, etc.)? What about extinct organisms? What about organisms that interbreed sometimes but not others? Now can use DNA fingerprinting.

Reproductive Isolation Geographic or physical isolation Evolve separate adaptations

There are two major barriers to gene flow between species: 1.Prezygotic barriers 1.Before or during fertilization 2.Postzygotic barriers 1.Occur after fertilization

Prezygotic barriers Temporal isolation – separation by time –Cicada One species breeds every 13 years Another species breeds every 17 years Overlap every 221 years.

Prezygotic barriers Ecological isolation – adapted to different microevironments in the same habitat. Behavioral isolation –Mating rituals –Vocalizations Mechanical isolation - incompatibility of body parts

Prezygotic barriers Gametic isolation – gametes are incompatible at a molecular level –Pollen –Enzymes in sperm

Postzygotic barriers Zygote either dies or fails to reproduce successfully. Hybrid inviability – embryo dies Hybrid sterility – offspring infertile Hybrid breakdown – offspring of hybrids weak or sterile.

Patterns of descent Divergent evolution – one species of organisms changes into two Convergent evolution – independent development of similar features in separate groups of organisms –Wings –Blood antifreeze proteins

Adaptive radiation – ( a form of divergent evolution) a single species gives rise to several, very differently adapted species. –Finches in the Galapagos –Most dramatic cases occur on islands Reproductive isolation Distinctive selection pressures Small population size Smaller number of species leaves more ecological niches open –Plants also radiate

Darwin believed evolution was very gradual Others believed in jumps or saltations “hopeful monsters” – flounders Organisms may not change for long periods (stasis) and then evolve rapidly – punctuated equilibrium

Prebiotic Evolution Chapter 18

Until about 300 years ago people believed in the idea of spontaneous generation – that life comes from non-living material Francesco Redi proved that magots did not come from rotting meat. Could microorganisms arise spontaneously? 1864 Lois Pasteur finally disproved this idea.

How did life arise on Earth? 1. “panspermia” – life arrived here from outer space –Not a testable hypothesis 2. Prebiotic evolution – life arose from non- living matter

For prebiotic evolution to take place, conditions on the early Earth must have been very different 1.The atmosphere contained virtually no free oxygen 2.There was no life on Earth 3.Life had 300 million years to get its act together

The early Earth’s atmosphere probably had hydrogen gas, ammonia, methane, and traces of carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide. –No rust –No ozone – UV radiation may have been a driving force –Heat from the earth and lightning also provided energy to make chemical bonds

Organic molecules could have come from comets, asteroids or meteors. Either way, oceans may have been full of organic molecules. More complex molecules needed more help to form, probably on clay and metal ions at the edges of oceans. Can make peptides of up to 50 amino acids in length.

First information carrying molecule Was probably RNA since it does not need enzymes or a primer –RNA can act as an enzyme

Cyanobacteria