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Macroevolution & Speciation

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Presentation on theme: "Macroevolution & Speciation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Macroevolution & Speciation
Biology Honors

2 Review: Adaptation Any heritable characteristic that increases an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment ORGANISMS CANNOT ADAPT TO THEIR ENVIRONMENT They are born that way or die!

3 Review: Microevolution
Focuses on the change in genetic frequencies for a trait in the population over time.

4 Macroevolution Accumulation of genetic changes over time leads to speciation Formation of a new species

5 What is a species? A population or group of populations,
whose members have the potential to interbreed with one another in nature to produce viable, fertile offspring, but who cannot successfully interbreed with members of other species

6 Mechanisms for Macroevolution
Requires reproductive isolation Pre-zygotic barriers Barriers prior to reproduction Post-zygotic barriers Barriers after reproduction

7 Pre-Zygotic Barrier: Temporal Isolation
Populations breed during different times

8 Pre-Zygotic Barrier: Behavioral Isolation
Populations respond to different mating cues Blue footed booby dance

9 Pre-Zygotic Barrier: Habitat Isolation
Populations are geographically separated

10 Pre-Zygotic Barrier: Mechanical Isolation
Reproductive parts are incompatible Ex: Pollinators and plants

11 Pre-Zygotic Barrier: Gametic Isolation
Gametes of different species don’t recognize each other and join Ex: Ocean organisms

12 Post-Zygotic Barriers
Hybrid Inviability Zygote forms but doesn’t develop Hybrid Sterility Hybrid offspring is not fertile Hybrid Breakdown Hybrid may be fertile but subsequent generations are not

13 Types of Speciation Allopatric speciation
Formation of new species due to geographic isolation Each group undergoes natural selection within its own area animation

14 Types of Speciation Sympatric speciation
Formation of a new species within a population Could be a result of behavioral or temporal isolation Ex: hawthorn/apple trees & apple maggot fly Flies normally lay eggs in hawthorn tree fruit Apples trees introduced, some laid eggs there

15 Crash Course – Speciation

16 Convergent Evolution Parallel evolution:
Similar environments produce similar species

17 Convergent Evolution Analogous structures
Similar structures without evolutionary relationships Ex: bats, birds, and butterflies all have wings

18 Evolutionary Pace Gradualism Punctuated equilibrium
Each new species evolves continuously over long spans of time The large phenotypic difference we see is largely due to the accumulation of many small genetic changes   Punctuated equilibrium Species have a long period where they remain unchanged , punctuated by a short phase of rapid changes


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