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Published byBarbra Greene Modified over 8 years ago
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How many species of spiders do you see?
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Vocabulary so we are all on the same page… Species: group of organisms that breed with one another and produce fertile offspring Share a common gene pool, largest gene pool possible Speciation – formation of a new species The shared gene pool is eventually split
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Reproductive Isolation Reproductive Isolation – when members of two populations can no longer interbreed and produce fertile offspring New species form when organisms are reproductively isolated. REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION is the KEY to SPECIATION!
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First a little story about our friend the squirrel…
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Geographic Isolation Populations become separated by geographic barriers such as rivers, mountains, or other bodies of water. The Grand Canyon Kaibab Squirrel Abert Squirrel
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The Gene Pools must separate to become a new species There is no gene flow between the populations AND Over time, the populations respond to new variations and natural selection as separate units
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Speciation Reproductive Isolation Geographical Isolation Temporal Isolation Behavioral Isolation The squirrels
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Reduction of gene flow
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Temporal Isolation Temporal Isolation – occurs when two or more subspecies reproduce at different times Day Blooming/Night Blooming Eastern and Western Spotted Skunks
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Speciation Reproductive Isolation Geographical Isolation Temporal Isolation Behavioral Isolation The squirrels The Skunks
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Behavioral Isolation Behavioral Isolation –capable of interbreeding BUT have different reproductive strategies Western MeadowlarkEastern Meadowlark
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Speciation Reproductive Isolation Geographical Isolation Temporal Isolation Behavioral Isolation The squirrels The Meadowlarks The Skunks
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What type of Isolation is under way? http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/beta/evolution/evolution-action-salamanders.html
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How many species of spiders do you see? THE HAPPY FACE SPIDERS! Look different but CAN interbreed!
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What about the ligers and mules? Are there any other gray areas for the definition of a species?
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Testing the Speciation Hypothesis in nature 1995 Hurricane brought the Iguana iguana species to a new island in the Caribbean Will it go extinct? Will the gene pool remain unchanged? Will it respond to new selection pressures and become reproductively Isolated?
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Testing the Speciation Hypothesis Artificially Separate cages act as what? Develop food preferences Mate and lay eggs on different food sources Can lead to the start of what?
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Test your understanding- Explain how geographical and reproductive isolation work together with mutations to cause variation within a species and possibly speciation.
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