Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClinton Daniels Modified over 9 years ago
1
Types of Natural Selection
2
Stabilizing Selection Favors average individual in population. Reduces variation in population. Ex: average height of humans.
3
Directional Selection Favors one extreme variation of a trait. Can lead to rapid evolution. Ex: Food shortage causes small seeds to disappear. Small birds die out and big birds become dominant.
4
Disruptive Selection Favors both extreme variations. Leads to evolution of 2 separate species. Ex: two extremes in bird beaks: short and fat (eats hard seeds) or long and thin (eats worms from earth)
5
Speciation Evolution of a new species. Members of similar population can no longer interbreed and produce fertile offspring.
6
Causes of Speciation
7
Geographic Isolation Physical barrier divides population
8
Reproductive Isolation Differ genetically or behaviorally. Different species of bowerbird construct elaborate bowers and decorate them with different colors in order to woo females. The Satin bowerbird (left) builds a channel between upright sticks, and decorates with bright blue objects. MacGregor’s Bowerbird (right) builds a tall tower of sticks and decorates with bits of charcoal. (evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/evo101)
9
Polyploidy Having multiple sets of a chromosome pair.
10
Patterns of Evolution
11
Divergent Evolution Species become increasingly different.
12
Type of divergent is… Adaptive Radiation- one species evolves in to many species to fit a number of different habitats “Darwin’s Finches”
13
Convergent Evolution Distantly related organisms evolve similar traits. Unrelated species occupy similar environments in different parts of the world. Ex: Anteater family (Armadillo) in N.America and Anteater family (Pangolin) in Africa. They share no genetic information yet become more similar due to same environment, climate, etc.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.