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Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools

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Page 1: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

SpeciationCreation of Unique Gene Pools

Page 2: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

I. Introduction

• A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution– 1. microevolution

• a. Definition• b. Example• c. Importance in evolutionary

process• d. Can be seen• e. Measurable• f. Natural selection

Page 3: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

2. macroevolution

• a. evolution or creation of new taxonomic groups

• b. Novel innovations• c. New ways of making

living• d. Branching of

phylogenetic tree• e. Evolution of coelom• f. May not occur by natural

selection• g. Harder to understand

Page 4: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

B. Speciation events may drive macroevolution

• 1. New species may be first of a new grade or branch

• 2. Two modes of speciation observed in fossil record– a. anagenesis– b. cladogenesis

Page 5: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

C. Anagenesis-gradualism

• 1. species seem to slowly gradually change

• 2. from one springs another

• 3. driven by natural selection

• 4. not as often seen in the fossil record

Page 6: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

D. Cladogenesis

• 1. branching pattern• 2. rapid speciation event• 3. punctuated equilibrium• 4. supported by many

records in fossil

Page 7: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

II. What is a species?• A. Morphological species concept

– 1. places specimen together or separates them on structural basis– 2. convenient when working in a lab– 3. fossil organisms– 4. organisms that don’t come into contact

Page 8: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

B. Biological species concept

• 1. definition• 2. particularly

good definition for population genetics

• 3. speciation occurs when two gene pools become separate and distinct

Page 9: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

III. How does speciation occur

A. Allopatric speciation1. barrier2. gene flow interupted3. differences

accumulate4. when become

sympatric?

Page 10: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

5. Generalizations

• a. Requires a lot of time generally

• b. Most often occurs in small populations

• c. What is barrier to one may not be barrier to another

• d. Adaptive radiation example of allopatric speciation

• e. End point of speciation event is hard to agree to

• f. Most common?

Page 11: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

B. Parapatric speciation

• 1. two populations sort of separated

• 2. experience different selection pressures at edges of range

• 3. differences accumulate despite gene flow

• 4. gene flow becomes impossible

Page 12: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

C. Sympatric speciation

• 1. most commonly seen in plants

• 2. common barrier to hybridization is meiotic failure of hybrid– a. Two distinct sets of

chromosomes– b. No homologous pairs– c. What happens at

prophase I of meiosis

Page 13: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

3. Polyploidy occurs commonly in plants

• a. Haploid• b. Diploid• c. Polyploid• d. Generally

leads to sterility

• e. But in plants

Page 14: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

4. Allopolyploidy

Page 15: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance
Page 16: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

4. New species form this way in plants because they self pollinate

Page 17: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

5. Very uncommon in animals-cichlids

Page 18: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

6. Parasites and hosts-apple maggot fly

Page 19: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Flies tend to stay on host

Page 20: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

V. Pre and postzygotic barriers to hybrid formation• A. Natural selection operates to

maintain separate gene pools when speciation has occurred

• 1. Imagine disruptive selection• 2. Specializations occur• 3. Overlap after speciation event• 4. Potential interbreeding• 5. Parental species have

specialized• 6. Hybrids dilute the

specializations• 7. Natural selection would come

down hard on the dilution

Page 21: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

B. Prezygotic barriers

• 1. Habitat isolation

Page 22: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

2. Behavioral isolation

Page 23: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Spotted Newts

Page 24: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Spermatophore and red eft

Page 25: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

3. Temporal isolation

Page 26: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

4. Vocalizations Eleutherodactylus coqui

Page 27: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

5. Mechanical Isolation

Page 28: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Kangaroo penis types

Page 29: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Adapters?

Page 30: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

C. Postzygotic barriers to hybridization

• 1. hybrid inviability• 2. hybrid sterility• 3. hybrid breakdown-F2 are sterile

Page 31: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

D. Thought questions

• 1. Do prezygotic or postzygotic barriers to hybrid formation form first?

• 2. Which of these two mechanisms is favored by natural selection?

• 3. Which of these two methods is more cost effective?

Page 32: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

VI. Potential forces behind macroevolutionary change• A. Chance– 1. cannot be

preadapted to a disaster

– 2. meteorite implosion will wipe out all but lucky few

– 3. who survives can direct future evolutionary paths

Page 33: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

B. Macromutations

• 1. translocations

Page 34: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

2. Inversions

Page 35: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

3. Chromosomal duplications

Page 36: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

C. Segmentation genes• 1. ancestral animals were

one continuous body piece

• 2. the evolution of segmentation genes produced a branch in the tree of life

• 3. segmentation of body parts allows specializations to occur in different regions of the body

• 4. feeding structures and locomotion appendages

Page 37: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

D. Homeotic genes

• 1. specify developmental plan for each segment

• 2. mutations can cause one body part to be replaced by a second

• 3. leg growing from head

Page 38: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

E. Hox genes control number of appendages• 1. ancestral fruit fly had

four wings• 2. more economical

and faster to fly with two wings

• 3. mutation in Hox genes can cause backward jump

• 4. devolution

Page 39: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

F. Allometric growth

• 1. varied growth rates for different parts of the body during development

Page 40: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

2. Mutation in the genes which govern allometric growth

• Might produce chances for rapid evolutionary chanage

• Growth rates altered, drastic changes in shape

• May or may not be adaptive

Page 41: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Ocean sun fish

Page 42: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

G. Changes in timing of development-paedomorphsis

• 1. retention of larval characteristics into adulthood

• 2. aquatic salamander• 3. by being able to remain in water may

have escaped terrestrial predators• 4. aquatic environment is not as harsh-

may have escaped dessication• 5. genes that cause metamorphosis

may have been blocked• 6. adult neotenic salamanders given

injections may display adult traits

Page 43: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

H. Neoteny –retention of juvenile traits into adulthood

Page 44: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance
Page 45: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

H. Old genes being turned back on

• 1. modern birds lack teeth

• 2. aerodynamically not efficient

• 3. ancestral birds had teeth

• 4. genes for teeth still reside in bird chromosomes

• 5. unlock the past-raw material for future evolutionary jumps?

Page 46: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

Inbreeding

Page 47: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

I. Jumping genes-transposons

Page 48: Speciation Creation of Unique Gene Pools. I. Introduction A. Microevolution vs. macroevolution – 1. microevolution a. Definition b. Example c. Importance

J. Viral transmission