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Species “Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding populations, which are reproductively isolated from other such groups” (Mayr, 1942)

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Presentation on theme: "Species “Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding populations, which are reproductively isolated from other such groups” (Mayr, 1942)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Species “Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding populations, which are reproductively isolated from other such groups” (Mayr, 1942) OEB 192 – 10.09.27

2 Microbial species “…a category that circumscribes a (preferably) genomically coherent group of individual isolates/strains sharing a high degree of similarity in (many) independent features, comparatively tested under highly standardized conditions” (Stackebrandt et al., 2002) “…characterized by a certain degree of phenotypic consistency, showing 70% of DNA-DNA binding and over 97% of 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene-sequence identity” (Vandamme et al., 1996)

3 Microbial species (Konstantinidis & Tiedje, 2005)

4 Evidence of species?: clusters of microheterogeneity (Acinas et al., 2004)

5 Genome vs. 16S rRNA diversity? (Thompson et al., 2005)

6 How do new species emerge? Allopatric speciation Sympatric speciation

7 “Everything is everywhere – the environment selects.” (Baas-Becking, 1934) Microbial biogeography

8 Ubiquitous dispersal? Diversity of Paraphysomonas (Finlay, 2002) (Finlay & Clarke, 1999)

9 Non-random distributions of free-living taxa (Hughes Martiny et al., 2006)

10 Biogeography: Sulfolobus (Whitaker et al., 2003)

11 Microbes in a host w/ biogeography: Helicobacter pylori (Falush et al.,2003)

12 Ecological species definition? (Cohan, 2001)

13 Case of ecotypes: Prochloroccus (Johnson et al., 2006)

14 Single rule may not always apply (Nesbø et al., 2006)

15 Wednesday (9/29): Microbial speciation


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