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BIOL102.

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Presentation on theme: "BIOL102."— Presentation transcript:

1 BIOL102

2 BIOL102 Origin of Species Part 1 – A few reminders from lecture 2
• Modern Synthesis of Genetics and Evolution • Hardy-Weinberg Principle • Factors Changing Allele Frequencies Source of cover picture: Reece et al. (2010) , Campbell Biology, 9th edition, Pearson Benjamin Cummings, San Francisco (CA), Figure 24.4c

3 BIOL102 Origin of Species Part 2 – Species Concepts • Species
• Biological Species Concept • Morphological Species Concept • Ecological Species Concept • Phylogenetic Species Concept

4 BIOL102 Origin of Species Part 3 – Speciation • Allopatric Speciation
• Sympatric Speciation • Rates of Speciation • Dynamics

5 Part 1 – A few reminders from lecture 2
Modern Synthesis of Genetics and Evolution • A population is the smallest biological unit that can evolve and is defined as a group of individuals of the same species that live, interbreed and produce fertile offspring in a particular geographic area • A gene pool consists of all alleles (forms of genes) for all loci in a population and is the source of genetic variation that produces the phenotypes and their traits on which natural selection acts • A population evolves when individuals with different genotypes survive or reproduce at different rates

6 Part 1 – A few reminders from lecture 2 Hardy-Weinberg Principle
• states that frequencies of alleles and genotypes in a population remain constant from generation to generation if certain conditions are met (Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium)  no mutations  random mating  no natural selection  extremely large population size (no effect of genetic drift)  no gene flow (migration into or out of a population)

7 Part 1 – A few reminders from lecture 2
Factors Changing Allele Frequencies • Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is a null hypothesis, which assumes that allele frequencies are not changed • However, there are at least four mechanisms of evolution, which cause changes in allele frequencies of populations:  mutations  gene flow  genetic drift  natural selection

8 Part 2 – Species Concepts
A. Species • is defined as an evolutionarily independent population or group of populations • Biologists commonly use the following four approaches to identify species:  the biological species concept  the morphological species concept  the ecological species concept  the phylogenetic species concept

9 Species

10 Part 2 – Species Concepts B. Biological Species Concept
• defines a species as a population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed and produce fertile offspring • considers populations to be evolutionarily independent if they are reproductively isolated from each other and no gene flow occurs between them

11 Biological Species Concept Prezygotic and Postzygotic Barriers
• Biologists categorize the mechanisms that stop gene flow between populations into prezygotic barriers (before fertilization) and postzygotic barriers (after fertilization)  prezygotic barriers: individuals of different species are prevented from mating  postzygotic barriers: individuals from different populations do mate, but the hybrid offspring produced have low fitness and do not survive or produce offspring

12 Prezygotic and Postzygotic Barriers
Individuals of different species Mating attempt Fertilization (zygote forms) Viable, fertile offspring Prezygotic barriers Postzygotic

13 Biological Species Concept
Prezygotic Barriers • block fertilization from occurring by:  impeding different species from attempting to mate  preventing the successful completion of mating  hindering fertilization if mating is successful

14 Prezygotic Barriers • Habitat isolation: two species encounter each other rarely, or not at all, because they occupy different habitats, even though not isolated by physical barriers • Temporal isolation: Species that breed at different times of the day, different seasons, or different years cannot mix their gametes • Behavioral isolation: courtship rituals and other behaviors unique to a species are effective barriers

15 Behavioral Isolation • Floral traits of plants can influence the behavior of pollinators, and thus whether plants can hybridize  two species of columbines (Aquilegia) in California can produce fertile hybrids, but flower structure determines that one species is pollinated by hummingbirds, the other by hawkmoths, so hybridization is rare

16 Behavioral Isolation

17 Prezygotic Barriers • Mechanical isolation: morphological differences (e. g., size and shape of reproductive organs) can prevent successful mating • Gametic isolation: sperm of one species may not be able to fertilize eggs of another species

18 Mechanical Isolation • In plants, mechanical isolation may involve pollinators  many orchid flowers look and smell like the females of particular pollinator species  male insects attempt to mate, thereby transferring pollen

19 Prezygotic Barriers Prezygotic barriers (a) (c) (e) (f) (b) (g) (d)
Habitat Isolation Temporal Behavioral Mechanical Gametic Individuals of different species MATING ATTEMPT FERTILIZATION (a) (c) (e) (f) (b) (g) (d) Figure 24.3 Exploring: Reproductive Barriers

20 Biological Species Concept
Postzygotic Barriers • prevent the hybrid zygote from developing into a viable, fertile adult due to:  reduced hybrid viability  reduced hybrid fertility  hybrid breakdown • Hybrids are the offspring of crosses between different species

21 Postzygotic Barriers • Reduced hybrid viability: genes of the different parent species may interact and impair the hybrid’s development • Reduced hybrid fertility: even if hybrids are vigorous, they may be sterile • Hybrid breakdown: some first-generation hybrids are fertile, but when they mate with another species or with either parent species, offspring of the next generation are feeble or sterile

22 Reduced Hybrid Fertility

23 Postzygotic Barriers Postzygotic barriers Reduced Hybrid Viability
Fertility Hybrid Breakdown FERTILIZATION VIABLE, FERTILE OFFSPRING Postzygotic barriers (k) (h) (i) (j) (l) Postzygotic Barriers Figure 24.3 Exploring: Reproductive Barriers

24 Biological Species Concept
Hybrid Zones • If two formerly isolated populations are reunited before complete reproductive isolation has developed, interbreeding can occur with three possible outcomes:  if hybrid offspring are as fit as those resulting from matings within each population, hybrids will mate with individuals of both parental species. The gene pools will gradually become completely mixed (no speciation)

25 Hybrid Zones  if hybrid offspring are less fit, reinforcement may result in more prezygotic barriers and complete reproductive isolation may evolve (speciation)  a hybrid zone may develop in the absence of reinforcement, or before reinforcement is complete, and may contain recombinant individuals resulting from many generations of hybridization

26 Hybrid Zones • Example: two species of European toads have a long
narrow hybrid zone  the toad hybrids have many defects, some of which are lethal  on average, a hybrid toad is significantly less fit as a purebred individual  the hybrid zone is narrow, because there is strong selection against hybrids. But it persists because individuals of both species continue to move into it and mate

27 Hybrid Zones Figure 24.3 Exploring: Reproductive Barriers

28 Biological Species Concept
Limitations • The criterion of reproductive isolation cannot be evaluated in fossils or in species that reproduce asexually  for example, prokaryotic and viral species must be defined differently • this concept can only be applied to populations that overlap geographically • it also emphasizes absence of gene flow, which can occur between distinct species  for example, grizzly bears and polar bears can mate to produce “grolar bears”

29 Limitations of the Biological Species Concept
Grizzly bear (U. arctos) Polar bear (U. maritimus) Hybrid “grolar bear” Figure 24.4 Hybridization between two species of bears in the genus Ursus.

30 Part 2 – Species Concepts C. Morphological Species Concept
• defines a species by differences in morphological or structural features  is based on the idea that distinguishing features are most likely to arise if populations are independent and isolated from gene flow  applies to sexual and asexual species but relies on subjective criteria  also cannot identify cryptic species that differ in non-morphological traits

31 Part 2 – Species Concepts D. Ecological Species Concept
• views a species in terms of its ecological niche  applies to sexual and asexual species and emphasizes the role of disruptive selection  is widely used for viral species (in addition to genetic homologies)

32 Part 2 – Species Concepts E. Phylogenetic Species Concept
• defines a species as the smallest group of individuals on a phylogenetic tree (monophyletic group)  applies to sexual and asexual species, but it can be difficult to determine the degree of difference required for separate species  on phylogenetic trees, an ancestral population plus all of its descendants is called a monophyletic group or clade, which is identified by synapomorphies, homologous traits inherited from a common ancestor that are unique to certain populations or lineages

33 Phylogenetic Species Concept

34 Phylogenetic Species Concept
• This concept can be applied to any population, but there are disadvantages:  phylogenies are currently available for only a tiny (though growing) subset of populations on the tree of life  would probably lead to recognition of many more species than either of the other species concepts

35 Part 3 – Speciation • A key event in the potential origin of a species occurs when a population is somehow severed from other populations of the parent species. With its gene pool isolated, the splinter population can follow its own evolutionary course and become reproductively incompatible • Two modes leading to reproductive barriers can be distinguished  allopatric speciation  sympatric speciation

36 Part 3 – Speciation • Allopatric speciation occurs when geographic
isolation creates a reproductive barrier (extrinsic mechanisms) • Sympatric speciation occurs when a reproductive barrier is created by something other than geographic isolation (intrinsic mechanisms)

37 A. Allopatric Speciation
Part 3 – Speciation A. Allopatric Speciation • Genetic isolation happens routinely when populations become physically separated. Physical isolation, in turn, occurs in one of two ways: dispersal or vicariance.  dispersal occurs when a population moves to a new habitat, colonizes it, and forms a new population  vicariance occurs when a physical barrier splits a widespread population into subgroups that are physically isolated from each other • Speciation that begins with physical isolation via either dispersal or vicariance is known as allopatric speciation

38 Allopatric Speciation by Dispersal or Vicariance

39 Allopatric Speciation
• Geographic separation prevents species from mating • Speciation occurs only with the evolution of reproductive barriers between the isolated population and its parent population

40 Allopatric Speciation
• The definition of barrier depends on the ability of a population to disperse  for example, a canyon may create a barrier for small rodents, but not birds, coyotes, or pollen • Separate populations may evolve independently through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift  for example, speciation of snapping shrimp (Alpheus) populations due to separation by the Isthmus of Panama

41 Physical Isolation and Reproductive Barriers
A. harrisii A. leucurus Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

42 Physical Isolation and Reproductive Barriers
Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

43 Physical Isolation and Reproductive Barriers
Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

44 Allopatric Speciation
• Regions with many geographic barriers typically have more species than do regions with fewer barriers • Reproductive isolation between populations generally increases as the distance between them increases  however, barriers to reproduction are intrinsic; separation itself is not a biological barrier

45 Allopatric Populations and Reproductive Isolation
EXPERIMENT Initial population of fruit flies (Drosophila pseudoobscura) Some flies raised on starch medium Mating experiments after 40 generations Some flies raised on maltose medium Figure Inquiry: Can divergence of allopatric populations lead to reproductive isolation?

46 Allopatric Populations and Reproductive Isolation
RESULTS Female Starch Maltose Male Number of matings in experimental group 22 9 8 20 population 1 population 2 in control group 18 15 12 Figure Inquiry: Can divergence of allopatric populations lead to reproductive isolation?

47 B. Sympatric Speciation
Part 3 – Speciation B. Sympatric Speciation • In sympatric speciation, speciation takes place in geographically overlapping populations • can occur if a genetic change produces a reproductive barrier between mutants and the parent population • may be the result of:  polyploidy  extreme habitat differentiation  sexual selection

48 Sympatric Speciation

49 Sympatric Speciation Polyploidy
• is the presence of extra sets of chromosomes due to accidents during cell division  an autopolyploid is an individual with more than two chromosome sets, derived from one species  an allopolyploid is a species with multiple sets of chromosomes derived from different species • is much more common in plants than in animals  many important crops (oats, cotton, potatoes, tobacco, and wheat) are polyploids

50 Autopolyploidy Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

51 Allopolyploidy Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

52 Allopolyploidy Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

53 Extreme Habitat Differentiation
Sympatric Speciation Extreme Habitat Differentiation • Sympatric speciation can result from the appearance of new ecological niches  for example, populations of the North American maggot fly prefer to live either on native hawthorn trees or on more recently introduced apple trees  although they are not yet separate species on the basis of any species concept, apple flies and hawthorn flies are diverging

54 Extreme Habitat Differentiation
Figure 24.6 Allopatric speciation of antelope squirrels on opposite rims of the Grand Canyon.

55 Sympatric Speciation Sexual Selection
• Sexual selection can drive sympatric speciation  such selection for mates of different colors has likely contributed to speciation in cichlid fish in Lake Victoria Normal light Monochromatic orange light P. pundamilia P. nyererei

56 Comparison with Allopatric Speciation
Sympatric Speciation Comparison with Allopatric Speciation • In allopatric speciation, geographic isolation restricts gene flow between populations  reproductive isolation may then arise by e. g., natural selection or genetic drift, in the isolated populations • In sympatric speciation, a reproductive barrier isolates a subset of a population without geographic separation from the parent species  sympatric speciation can result from polyploidy, natural selection, or sexual selection

57 Part 3 – Speciation C. Rates of Speciation
• differ among organisms and can occur in time scales  a slow rate of speciation evidenced by a living horseshoe crab (13 species) and a 300 million year-old fossil  a rapid rate of speciation evidenced by Galapagos finches which have diversified into 13 species within the last 100,000 years

58 Part 3 – Speciation D. Dynamics • Gradual model
 traditional evolutionary trees diagram the descent of species as gradual divergence

59 Dynamics • Punctuated equilibrium  is a contrasting model
of evolution  states that species most often diverge in spurts of relatively sudden change  accounts for the relative rarity of transitional fossils and hence appears to be a more accurate view of speciation dynamics

60 BIOL101 Introduction to Biology B
Learning Objectives and Check of Understanding • Compare and contrast the different species concepts? • Distinguish prezygotic and postzygotic barriers. • Differentiate allopatric and sympatric speciation. • Compare and contrast the models describing the dynamics of speciation.

61 BIOL101 Introduction to Biology B
Reading Assignments • Campbell: Chapter 24 • Sadava: Chapter 23

62 Brief Outline of the Upcoming Lecture Classification and Phylogeny
Part 1 – A few reminders from lecture 3 Part 2 – Classification and Taxonomy Part 3 – Phylogeny or Systematics 62


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