Allopatric Speciation Flashcards
1
Q
State first stage in allopatric speciation
Parent population
A
- Parent population is able to increase its geographical range (move and spread out across the ladscape).
- Gene flow is regular
2
Q
State second stage in allopatric speciation
Formation of barriers
A
- Over time physical geographical barriers form which begin to isolate the populations from each other.
- Gene flow is less regular since organisms struggle to cross these barriers.
3
Q
What are examples of physical geographical barriers?
A
- Continental drift
- Climate change
- Changes in sea level
- Mountain range formation
4
Q
State third
Isolation and mutations
A
- The physical geographical barriers then isolate the population and so gene flow stops.
- Any mutations that are beneficial to a population are not shared to other populations.
- If environments have different selection pressures then different mutations will be beneficial.
eg: snow means white coat is beneficial for species A
5
Q
State fourth stage in allopatric speciation
A
- As the mutations increase in each population, they become more and more different to each other.
- If they are brought back together, they cannot interbreed to produce fertile viable offspring.
- They are now a different species.