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Published byJoleen Nelson Modified over 9 years ago
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The Process of Speciation
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What is Speciation? The formation of a new species Species: a group of organisms that can breed with one another and produce fertile offspring In order to create a different and new species, you must change the gene pool But, how do you change the gene pool?
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Reproductive Isolation To create a new species, there must be isolation Reproductive Isolation: When members of 2 populations can no longer interbreed and produce fertile offspring; now have separate gene pools Caused by 3 ways
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Behavioral Isolation 2 populations are capable of interbreeding but have different courtship rituals –Bird of Paradise Mating Dance –Mating Calls/Songs Humpback Whale –Calls/Whistles of Meadowlark Bird http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/ animals/
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Geographic Isolation Two populations are separated by geographic barriers Ex: Rivers, Mountains, Bodies of Water May not be permanent (waters may flood together, land bridge between islands)
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Squirrels and the Grand Canyon
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Reproductive Temporal Isolation 2 or more species reproduce at different times Ex: 3 species of orchids release pollen only one day a yr. Since they don’t release pollen on the same day, they can never cross pollinate or interbreed. Ex: eastern spotted skunk mates in late winter and western spotted skunk mates in late summer.
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Pulling It All Together- Darwin’s Finches FOUNDERS ARRIVE GEOGRAPHIC ISOLATION CHANGES IN THE GENE POOL REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION ECOLOGICAL COMPETITION CONTINUED EVOLUTION
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