Biology 100/101
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Announcements
Text Readings in Lewis et al.Chapter 17, Speciation and Extinction Much of the material cited in this lecture outline came from your textbook (Lewis et al). It is highly beneficial to read these chapters carefully before your final exam. The "Reviewing Concepts" boxes are valuable summaries of the main ideas in these sections of the text. You have open access (no log-in or password needed) to instructional materials on the Text web site. Select the text chapter you want and use the links to the e-learning modules or other available materials. There is also a collection of study materials called the "Essential Study Partner" that you may find useful. Web CrossingYou may also ask questions and see answers to your classmates' questions in Web Crossing in the "Talk to Sarah and Ed" discussion. Objectives:The content of today's lecture will help you complete these assignments: Take-Home Assignment #8 - Biodiversity and Evolution due at lecture Wednesday Dec. 5. Web Crossing Assignment #4 due at 8:00 AM Wednesday Dec. 5. After studying this material you should be able to:
Web Resources:
These links would provide good sources for Extra Credit Projects (due in Web Crossing 8:00 AM Monday, December 3 ) or the Fourth Web Crossing Assignment (due 8:00 AM, Wednesday, December 5). There are lots of great resources linked to this "library". Don't believe the "intelligent design" proponents when they tell you the human eye is too complex to have evolved from a simpler structure. What is Macroevolution?
Some Examples of Macroevolution: Evolution as a Fact AND a Theory
Evolution, the change in the genetic composition of a population over time or the development of new species and extinction of previously existing species is FACT. The mechanisms by which we think evolution occurs (e.g., natural selection, mutation, genetic drift) are SCIENTIFIC THEORIES that explain these observed changes in living organisms over time. Recall Lecture One, Science as a Way of Knowing the Natural World. Once a hypothesis has been supported by many experiments and/or observations it is considered by the community of scientists to be a theory. (Note that this is very different from the common use of the word, meaning an opinion or a guess.) In summary, Darwin established the FACT of evolution, and proposed a THEORY, natural selection, to explain the mechanism of evolution.
What is a Species?As with our earlier discussion of species diversity, the biological definition of species is important in the discussion of MACROEVOLUTION. When we talk about the evolution of new species from pre-exixting species we need some criterion to determine when we are seeing a new species
New Species and Reproductive IsolationThe key to understanding the formation of new species is understanding how a population becomes reproductively isolated from other populations of the same species. Think of this as the isolation of gene pools (all the genes and their alleles in a population). Understanding speciation is based on understanding HOW two populations can become genetically different enough to become unable to reproduce with each other. If populations are not reproductively isolated, gene flow between the populations maintains their genetic similarity and they maintain the ability to interbreed, so new species do not form. Populations that are not reproductively isolated may change genetically over time--they evolve (microevolution) --but those changes are shared among the populations by gene flow so they remain as one species. "Evolution's human and chimp twist". (from BBC News) Gene flow between early humans and chimpanzees? The rest of this outline describes the various ways in which this gentic reproducive separation can happen.
Some documented examples of the evolution of new species Genetic Changes that Lead to Reproductive Isolation of PopulationsNew species arise when genetic differences accumulate to the point when the two populations can no longer successfully mate and reproduce. (Remember: species can be defined as "A group of similar individuals that breed sexually in nature only among themselves [produce fertile offspring]....." For new species to form, reproductive isolation is necessary. Genetic changes can lead to a variety of isolating mechanisms. Some of these differences are the result of single gene mutations. Odd fly uncovers evolution secret Resource found by Tara Frey. Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms: (from
text,
fig. 17.4, pg 306)
Geographic Relationships in the Process of SpeciationIn some instances, two populations are isolated in different geographic locations so that initial reproductive isolation of two populations is affected by geographic isolation. Subsequent genetic changes resulting from the forces of natural selection, genetic drift, migration, nonrandom mating, and mutation in the two geographically isolated populations can, but don't necessarily, result in reproductive isolation and the evolution of new species. In other examples, genetic changes can occur in two groups within the same or adjacent habitats and produce reproductive isolation and new species. A common misconception is that formation of new species requires geographical isolation. Geographic isolation may be involved, but that is not always the case. The important criterion is that there must be reproductiove isolation and that CAN occur without geographic isolation.
Allopatric Speciationallo = other; and patric has to do with country, as in patriot - a person who loves one's country. Allopratric speciation is literally speciation that occurs in different countries. Members of two newly formed populations cannot interbreed because they are geographically separated. Think of this as the concept of islands and barriers:
Parapatric SpeciationPara = alongside The formation of a new species when populations inhabit neighboring areas but mate mostly among themselves, such as seen in these tropical little greenbul birds (Text figure 17.6, pg 309). Sympatric SpeciationSym = same Geographic isolation is NOT always necessary for speciation to occur. Genetic changes can occur in some individuals in a population that result in their reproductive isolation from the rest of the population. Speciation can occur within the range of the parent population (and sometimes quite rapidly). Gene flow may be disrupted by several types of genetic change: An Example of Speciation by Hybridization and Polyploidy Tragopogon
Speciation and TimeAn evolutionary tree (or phylogeny), depicting rates and times of speciation and extinction events. Evolution occurs in a branching pattern, with one species giving rise to others as they occupy and adapt to new habitats. They descend from an original ancestral form, much as the branches on a tree arise from the same trunk. (Text figure 17.9, pg. 311)
A phylogeny depicts species' relationships based on descent from shared ancestors. Adaptive Radiation: the divergence of several new types of organisms from a single ancestral type. When a population faces an environment with abundant and diverse resources (such as the opening up of many new habitats), a burst of speciation can occur if members of a population inherit a structure or ability that gives them an advantage. Speciation events lead to the multiplication and diversification of species into higher taxa (e.g., genera, families, orders, classes, phyla, etc.). All species (animals, plants, fungi, and all major groups of microorganisms) can be traced back to a single origin of life on earth. Evolution is a continuing process that explains the history of life on earth, as well as the diversity of life today. Species ExtinctionsExtinction: the disappearance of a species, or the inability of a species to adapt to a particular environmental challenge.
Earth's mass extinctions: (text figure 17.15 left, pg. 316) and (text figure 17.15 left, pg. 317) The Sixth Extinction, by Niles Eldridge. An excellent read! |
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