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OBJECTIVES: 1) EXPLAIN WHY DEFINING SPECIES IS DIFFICULT 2) IDENTIFY CAUSES OF SPECIATION 3) DESCRIBE MACROEVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES/PATTERNS SPECIATION &

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Presentation on theme: "OBJECTIVES: 1) EXPLAIN WHY DEFINING SPECIES IS DIFFICULT 2) IDENTIFY CAUSES OF SPECIATION 3) DESCRIBE MACROEVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES/PATTERNS SPECIATION &"— Presentation transcript:

1 OBJECTIVES: 1) EXPLAIN WHY DEFINING SPECIES IS DIFFICULT 2) IDENTIFY CAUSES OF SPECIATION 3) DESCRIBE MACROEVOLUTIONARY PROCESSES/PATTERNS SPECIATION & MACROEVOLUTION

2 Are these spiders the same species?

3 What is a species?? Different species concepts…  Biological species concept  Phylogenetic species concept  Ecological species concept

4 Biological Species Concept 1 or more populations whose members interbreed and produce fertile offspring Reproductively isolated from other species Has own gene pool

5 Problems with Biological Species… Asexual Reproduction.. Hybrids…

6 Speciation Event that splits lineage and produces 2 or more species Speciation can be difficult to identify…

7 Ring species (ex. Ensatina)  All of these salamanders can interbreed with their immediate neighbors except E. eschsholtzii and E. klauberi  Where did speciation occur?

8 ISOLATION + SELECTIVE PRESSURE What causes speciation?

9 GEOGRAPHIC REPRODUCTIVE Types of Isolation

10 Geographic Isolation…  Event causes populations to separate  Gene flow ceases

11  Over time, the 2 populations experience different selective pressures  Physical changes  Food/Habitat preferences  Courtship

12 Species do not need to be completely separated  Broad geographic range  Reduced gene flow  Hybrid zones  May or may not = speciation

13 Reproductive Isolation Prezygotic barriers – prevent fertilization  Temporal  Habitat  Behavioral

14  Mechanical  Gametic

15 Postzygotic barriers  Hybrid inviability  Hybrid sterility  Hybrid breakdown

16 Types of Speciation: Allopatric Results from geographic isolation  Natural selection  Genetic drift Most common Sympatric Same location  Change in ploidy  Ecological change More common in plants

17 Rate of change 2 models try to explain fossil record Gradualism  Proposed by Darwin  Evolution is a continuous process  Change is slow and steady  Series of transitional forms  Millions of years  Difficult to observe in fossil record

18 Punctuated equilibrium  Proposed by Gould and Eldridge (1970s)  Fossil record may not be as incomplete as we believe  Long periods with little change are interrupted by short bursts of rapid speciation (tied to speciation event)  Macromutation  Skip transitional forms  Thousands of years

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20 Macroevolution Large-scale Evolution  Species level + Zooms out on tree of life

21 Patterns in Macroevolution

22 Stasis Lineage remains stable/little change for long period of time What can this tell us?

23 Speciation Phylogenetic tree can reveal history, frequency of speciation in a clade

24 Extinction Opens ecological niches Surviving species rapidly diversify

25 Adaptive Radiation Evolutionary diversification of many species from one/few ancestral species in short amount of time Divergent Adaptive zones – new ecological opportunities


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