Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byOwen Rivera Modified over 10 years ago
1
1 Campbell et al. Chpt. 24 The Origin of Species
2
2 leads to changes Microevolution leads to changes within populations within populations Macroevolution leads to great phenotypic changes resulting in distinctive lineages (e.g. species)
3
3 Diversity of life What is a species? How does speciation occur? Rate of evolution
4
4 1. Diversity of Life
5
5 Part of giant experiment called life 1. Diversity of Life Cambrian Explosion (Burgess shell)
6
6 1. Diversity of Life Diversity increased over time…
7
7 1. Diversity of Life … with some interuptions
8
8 1. Diversity of Life
9
9 Bushy tree Evolution does not follow an inbuilt direction!
10
10 1. Diversity of Life Hobbits - human tree just got bushier still. Homo floresiensis from 18,000 years ago, 1m high
11
11 1. Diversity of Life Species = basic unit
12
12 1. Diversity of Life Species = basic unit Speciation - rise of new species Continuous lineage - information passed through genes
13
13 1. Diversity of Life 1.4 million species described ca. 10 million estimated many extinct species (about 90% of all species that ever lived are extinct)
14
14 1. Diversity of Life 1.4 million species described ca. 10 million estimated many extinct species Large diversity of species - speciation must be a common event Understanding how this diversity arose is a central question in evolutionary biology
15
15 Diversity of life What is a species? How does speciation occur? Rate of evolution
16
16 2. Species Concepts I. Morphological Species Concept Species are similar in their appearance
17
17 2. Species Concepts I. Morphological Species Concept - sometimes hard to apply Two different speciesOne single species
18
18 2. Species Concepts I. Morphological Species Concept - sometimes gets it wrong New Zealand moa (extinct): females much bigger than males
19
19 2. Species Concepts II. Biological Species Concept Two individuals of the same species interbreed with another in the wild and produce viable and fertile young
20
20 2. Species Concepts II. Biological Species Concept - problems Fossils - how do we know if they interbreed? Good species can sometimes produce hybrid Asexual organisms
21
21 2. Species Concepts II. Biological Species Concept - problems
22
22 2. Species Concepts III. Cohesion Species Concept Adaptive landscape
23
23 2. Species Concepts IV. Phylogenetic Species Concept Species = lineage between successive speciation events
24
24 Diversity of life What is a species? How does speciation occur? Rate of evolution
25
25 3. Speciation Process of speciation Parent species I. Barrier 2 separate species III. Dont interbreed II. Diverge
26
26 3. Speciation I. Establishing a barrier Geographical separation Breed at different times Different courtship display etc Species are prevented from mating with each other- pre-zygotic barriers
27
27 3. Speciation II. Population divergence Can be caused by any of the 5 causes of evolution Example: Artificial selection of domesticated animals
28
28 3. Speciation II. Population divergence Example: Ring species Herring/Lesser Black-backed Gull
29
29 3. Speciation II. Population divergence Genetic subdivision Example: Mice on Madeira
30
30 3. Speciation III. Sexual incompatibility Offspring from matings between groups are not viable or fertile - post-zygotic barriers
31
31 1. Barrier 3. Speciation Example Picture-winged fruit fly (Rhagoletis)
32
32 3. Speciation Example Picture-winged fruit fly (Rhagoletis) Witnessed speciation! 1. Barrier 2. Divergence 3. Dont interbreed
33
33 Diversity of life What is a species? How does speciation occur? Rate of evolution
34
34 4. Rate of Evolution Gradualism (Darwin) - steady accumulation of small changes over long periods of time Rapid bursts of fast changes Stasis - no changes over long periods of time
35
35 4. Rate of Evolution Example: Radiolaria Punctuated Equilibrium (Eldrige & Gould) - long periods of stasis interrupted by short periods of rapid change
36
36
37
37 Can speciation events be replicated? Play again the tape THE END
38
38 1. Diversity of Life
39
39 2. Species Concepts
40
40 4. Rate of Evolution Example: Radiation of Darwin Finches on Galapagos
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.