3.7.3 Speciation Flashcards
1
Q
What are the 2 types of factor that cause phenotypic variation?
A
- genetic factors
- environmental factors
2
Q
How does meiosis result in cells that have the haploid number of chromosomes and show genetic variation?
A
- homologous chromosomes pair up
- crossing over
- produces new combination of alleles
- chromosomes separate
- at random (independent segregation)
- produces new combinations of chromosomes
- chromatids separated at meiosis II
3
Q
What are features of variation due to genetic factors? ***I’m not sure this is right
A
- monotonic characteristic - controlled for by 1 gene
- show discrete forms in the range of values
- no intermediate types found
- not affected by environment
- (frequency histogram has separate bars)
- eg ABO blood groups
4
Q
What are features of variation due to the environment *** I’m not sure this is right
A
- polygenic characteristic - controlled for by 1 gene
- show continuous forms in the range of values
- intermediate types found
- (frequency histogram is smooth curve)
- eg height
5
Q
What is evolution?
A
change in the allele frequency of a population over time
6
Q
What is sympatric speciation?
A
- formation of new species by reproductive isolation
- from a population living in the same area without geographical isolation
7
Q
What is allopatric isolation?
A
- formation of new species from different populations
- isolated in different areas
8
Q
What is speciation?
A
- variation exists due to mutation
- 2 populations of a species become separated (eg geographical isolation or another type of isolation)
- no gene flow between them so they are reproductively isolated
- each population may experience different environmental conditions (eg abiotic/biotic - selection pressures)
- change in allele frequency in each group due to selection pressures due to selection over a long time
- this is (allopatric/ sympatric) speciation
- (new species: eventually different species can’t breed to produce fertile offspring)
9
Q
How can sympatric speciation occur?
A
- temporal - different breeding seasons
- behavioural - different courtship displays
- mechanical - mismatch of reproductive parts
- gamete incompatibility - sperm killed in female reproductive tract/can’t enter egg
- hybrid inviability/infertility
10
Q
What is genetic drift?
A
- in small populations, changes in allele frequency have a large impact (alleles lost, new alleles selected for)
11
Q
How can genetic drift occur when isolated populations interbreed?
A
- smaller populations have fewer different alleles/smaller gene pool/less genetic variation
- migrants bring in new alleles and increase gene pool