SC B-5.4: Explain how genetic variability and environmental factors lead to biological evolution. SPECIATION
Speciation: formation of a new species Species: group of similar organisms that can successfully breed & their offspring are fertile Individuals of same species share a common gene pool genetic change in 1 member of species can spread thru the population If that change increases fitness many members of the species
Isolating Mechanisms When a subset of a population becomes isolated & no longer breeds with original population over time they will no longer be able to interbreed …..new species has formed
Behavioral Isolation Occurs when 2 populations are capable of interbreeding BUT have differences in courtship rituals or reproductive strategies that involves behavior
Behavioral Isolation Eastern & Western meadowlarks have overlapping ranges. No interbreeding because they have different mating songs
Geographic Isolation 2 populations physically separated by geographic barriers May separate some species (non-flying insects, small mammals) but not others (birds, flying insects) Does not guarantee formation of new species
Geographic Isolation
Temporal Isolation 2 or more species reproduce at different times
Testing Natural Selection in Nature Darwin’s Finches: Once Darwin realized all the birds on the Galapagos were finches he hypothesized that they all had a common finch ancestor
Darwin’s Finches His hypothesis relied on 2 testable assumptions: Must have enough heritable variation to provide raw material for natural selection These variations must produce differences in fitness
Darwin’s Finches Variation studied by Peter & Rosemary Grant Found lots of variation in a # of traits
Darwin’s Finches Was there differences in their fitness?
Factors Leading to Speciation Galapagos finches: Small birds Do not usually fly over open water
Factors Leading to Speciation Founder Effect a few finches from South America made it to one of the Galapagos islands once there, they managed to survive & reproduce
Factors Leading to Speciation 2. Geographic Isolation once there, birds do not move from island to island
Factors Leading to Speciation 3. Changes in the Gene Pool over time populations on different islands natural selection forces acted on the different populations…which had slightly different variations among the population…leading to development of different adaptations suited to the available food sources on each island
3. changes in the Gene Pool Over time natural selection would have caused birds on islands with large seeds or nuts as food source to have larger and larger beaks… birds on islands with plentiful small seeds would still have small beaks
Factors Leading to Speciation 4. Reproductive Isolation if finches return to original island after natural selection has changed their beak size they are not likely to interbreed with original population of finches the finch is very particular about beak size when choosing a mate So population with large beak will live in same community as small beaked finches but never interbreed
Factors Leading to Speciation 5. Ecological Competition different populations of finch on same island will be competing for resources during dry season when few seeds available those with more specialized beaks will have less competition from others so will be more successful ….over time differences between populations will increase
Factors Leading to Speciat 6. Continued Evolution This process of geographic isolation..reproductive isolation…genetic change would have been repeated many times over the years on the Galapagos
Studying Evolution Since Darwin Modern technology has confirmed Darwin’s hypothesis that living species descended with modification from common ancestors that lived in ancient past DNA, RNA, proteins
Limitations of Research There are “holes” in the evolutionary tree intermediate fossils helpful
Why is Understanding Evolution Important? Because it is still going on Drug-resistance in bacteria Understanding it helps respond to changes in ways that hopefully improve human life