G&E: Speciation & Genetic Drift COPY Flashcards
Speciation
The development of a new species from an existing species.
When does speciation occur?
When populations of the same species become reproductively isolated.
Reproductively isolated
Changes in the allele frequency cause changes in phenotype, which means populations of the same species can no longer interbreed to produce fertile offspring.
Allopatric speciation
Results from geographical isolation - when a physical barrier divides a population of a species, causing some individuals to become separated from the main population.
Sympatric speciation
When speciation occurs due to a population becoming reproductively isolated without any physical separation.
What does allopatric speciation require that sympatric speciation doesn’t?
Geographical isolation
Explain allopatric speciation:
- Geographically separated populations will experience different conditions and selection pressures.
- Different alleles will be more advantageous in different areas.
- Directional selection will act then act on the alleles.
- Allele frequency will change as mutations occur independently in each population.
- Genetic drift may also affect the allele frequencies.
- Differences accumulate in gene pools of separated populations, causing changes in phenotype frequencies.
- Eventually, populations will have changed so much that they cannot breed to produce fertile offspring.
Explain sympatric speciation:
Random mutations could occur within a population, preventing members of that population breeding with other members of the species.
Reproductive isolation ocurs because changes in alleles and phenotypes in some individuals prevent them from breeding successfully.
What do these changes include?
- Seasonal - individuals develop different flowering or mating seasons/become sexually active at different times of the year.
- Mechanical - changes in genatalia prevent successful mating.
- Behavioural - group of individuals develop courtship rituals that aren’t attractive to the main population.
Genetic drift
Chance, rather than environmental factors, dictates which individuals survive, breed and pass on alleles.
Evolution can occur because of what two things?
natural selection and variation
Explain how genetic drift can eventually lead to reproductive isolation and speciation:
- Individuals within populations show variation in genotypes.
- By chance, the allele for one genotype is passed on to the offspring more often than others.
- No. of individuals with the allele increases.
- Changes in allele frequency in two isolated populations could eventually lead to reproductive isolation and speciation.
When does evolution by genetic drift have a greater effect?
When population size is small - chance has greater infleunce.
Briefly describe how evolutionary change has resulted in diversity of organisms:
- At the start, there was one population of organisms.
- Population was divided and the new population evolved into separate species.
- New species were divided again and new populations evolved into separate species.
- Process has repeated over long periods of time to create millions of new species.