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Chapter 24 The Origin of Species
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2 patterns of evolutionary change anagenesis – (phyletic evolution) -transformation of an unbranched lineage of organisms cladogenesis – (branching evolution) -budding of one or more new species from a parent species that continues to exist (more important than anagenesis in the history of life)
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Figure 24.1 Two patterns of speciation
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Species Population or group of populations whose members potentially can interbreed to produce fertile offspring
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Reproductive barriers: A.Prezygotic barriers – prevent mating or fertilization 1) ecological (habitat) isolation – different habitats & don’t encounter each other ex: 2 species of snakes that live mainly on water vs. terrestrial 2) temporal isolation – mating/flowering not in sync ex: 2 species that breed at different times of the day
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3) behavioral isolation – little recognition between males & females ex: song/mating dance 4) mechanical isolation – sexual reproductive structures are too different ex: male & female copulatory organs incompatible 5) gametic isolation – gametes fail to combine with one another or are inviable ex: gamete recognition based on surface proteins of the egg cell
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Figure 24.3 Courtship ritual as a behavioral barrier between species
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B. Postzygotic barriers – prevent viable, fertile adults 1) hybrid inviability (reduced hybrid viability)– hybrids do not reach fertility or sexual maturity ex: hybrids don’ t develop properly or are frail 2) hybrid sterility (reduced hybrid fertility) – hybrids don’t produce functional gametes ex: hybrids are completely or largely sterile 3) hybrid breakdown – hybrid offspring have reduced viability ex: second generation feeble or sterile
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Modes of speciation a)allopatric – a geographic barrier physically isolates population, blocking gene flow -usu. occurs at the fringe of the parent pop.’s range (peripheral isolate) b)sympatric – a new species arises in the midst of the parent species -chromosomal changes & nonrandom mating reduce gene flow
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Figure 24.6 Two modes of speciation
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Figure 24.7 Allopatric speciation of squirrels in the Grand Canyon
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Adaptive radiation -evolution of many diversely adapted species from a common ancestor ex: Galapagos finches
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Figure 24.11 A model for adaptive radiation on island chains
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Hybridization of species 1)autopolyploid – has more than 2 chromosome sets all derived from a single species ex: 4n + 2n = 3n (sterile) 2)allopolyploid – (more common) – 2 different species contribute to polyploid hybrid; may be more vigorous, but usu. sterile (may reproduce asexually) 2n = 4 + 2n = 6 2n = 10 (A) (B)(C)
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Punctuated equilibrium -nongradual appearance of species due to spurt changes
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Figure 24.17 Two models for the tempo of speciation
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Mechanisms of macroevolution 1) preaptation (exaptation) – structure which evolved in one context and became co-opted for another function 2) regulatory genes – greatly alter adult forms by allometric growth – different growth rates by various body parts paedomorphosis – retention of juvenile features of an organism’s evolutionary ancestors in an adult
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Figure 24.19 Allometric growth
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Figure 24.21 Paedomorphosis
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Chapter 25 Phylogeny and Systematics
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phylogeny – evolutionary history of a species
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Table 25.1 The Geologic Time Scale
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Causes of evolutionary trends 1)Result of species selection 2)Result of continental drift Pangaea – supercontinent 200 – 250 mya adaptive zone – new way of life presenting many opportunities previously unexploited 3) Mass extinctions
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Figure 25.4 The history of continental drift
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Classification Grouping may be: 1) monophyletic – single ancestor produces all species of that taxon 2) polyphyletic – members of the taxon are derived from 2 or more ancestral forms not common to all members 3) paraphyletic – excludes species that share a common ancestor that gave rise to species included in the taxon
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homology – likeness attributed to shared ancestry analogy – likeness due to evolutionary convergence – unrelated species developing similar features due to similar adaptations to be selected for
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Modern systematics tools: (to determine homology) 1)Protein comparison 2)DNA comparison a) DNA – DNA hybridization b) restriction mapping c) DNA sequencing – order of nucleotides d) analysis of fossilized DNA 3) Molecular clocks – determining protein evolution to see where branches occur
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Figure 25.7 Hierarchical classification
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3 taxonomic schools of thought 1)phenetics – determines taxa strictly based on phenotypic similarities & differences for as many characteristics as possible 2)cladistics – classifying orgs. According to the order in which clades (evolutionary branches) arise 3)classical evolutionary systematics – considers both divergence of structures & sequence of branching
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Chapter 26 Early Earth and the Origin of Life
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Formation of the Earth geological events shape biological evolution, & organisms change the planet in turn episodes initiate new ways of life ex: evolution of photosynthetic organisms totally changed Earth’s atmosphere between 4.6 – 5 bya our solar system formed from a cloud of matter Earth formed ~ 4.6 bya due to ice & dust gravitationally pulling together
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Figure 26.0x Volcanic activity and lightning associated with the birth of the island of Surtsey near Iceland; terrestrial life began colonizing Surtsey soon after its birth
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began as a cold world which melted due to heat, radioactive decay, & impact of meteorites hot, molten mass separated into layers of varying density Life began when atm. had little O 2 & the mixture of gases comprised a reducing atm. prokaryotes only for 1 st few billion years after Earth’s crust cooled & solidified stromatolites – banded domes of sediment similar to bacterial mats in Fig Tree chert (rock formation in Africa) – oldest available fossils ~ 3.5 bya
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Figure 26.3 Early (left) and modern (right) prokaryotes
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Figure 26.3x1 Spheroidal Gunflint Microfossils
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Figure 26.4 Bacterial mats and stromatolites
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Origin of life One hypothesis (most scientists agree) – nonliving materials became ordered into molecular aggregates eventually capable of self-replication & metabolism
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1 st organisms were products of chemical evolution in 4 stages 1) abiotic synthesis & accumulation of small organic molecules (monomers) such as AA’s & nucleotides 2)joining of these into polymers, including proteins & nucleic acids 3)aggregation of abiotically produced molecules into droplets, protobionts that had chemical characteristics different from their surroundings 4) origin of heredity (maybe before the droplet stage)
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1920’s Oparin/Haldane – independently hypothesized Earth’s early atm. provided conditions not possible today 1953 Miller/Urey – tested Oparin’s hypothesis in lab & produced diverse organic molecules from inorganic precursors
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Figure 26.10 The Miller-Urey experiment
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