Lecture 21: Species, speciation and Hybridization Flashcards

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1
Q

What are sympatric?

A

Same species living in the same region.

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2
Q

Why is allopatric?

A

Different species living in different regions

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3
Q

What are the two main species concept?

A

Taxonomic (or morphological): based on distinct measurable differences

Biological: Based on interfertility among individuals

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4
Q

What is the biological species concept?

A

It says species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups.

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5
Q

How do you differentiate between the same species and a different one using the biological species concept?

A

If two organisms can interbreed then, they are referred to as same species, otherwise they are considered as different species.

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6
Q

What does the biological species concept highlight?

A
  1. It focuses on the PROCESS
  2. Geographic isolation alone is NOT SUFFICIENT to say organisms are different species, because they can interbreed if the geographic barrier can be removed.

.3. Isolation does NOT have to be absolute

  1. Organisms must interbreed together in the wild to be considered as SAME SPECIES
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7
Q

What sort of speciation is more common?

A

Allopatric: It allows for more evolution in isolation, as it has a geographic barrier, which allows for minimal gene flow.

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8
Q

What are pre-zygotic reproductive isolation barrier?

A

Barrier in finding mate, or a successful fertilization

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9
Q

What are the post-zygotic reproductive isolation barrier?

A

Barrier in the development and growth of a zygote ( differential survival of zygote ) or in the adulthood or reproduction of that zygote.

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10
Q

What are the reasons behind pre-zygotic barriers?

A

Geographical, Ecological,

Temporal, Behavioral (mate recognition),

Mechanical (genital structure compatibility),

Cellular (sperm-egg compatibility)

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11
Q

What were the results from the study of apple-maggot bees?

A

The bees on the cultivated apple trees reproduced much faster than the bees on the maggot trees, and this lead to a pre-zygotic reproduction isolation as the bees couldn’t find mates.

Gene flow reduced by 94%

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12
Q

What are the examples of post-zygotic barriers?

A
  1. Intrinsic: Zygote is not sterile,
    Inviable, or an abnormally developed hybrid
  2. Extrinsic: Ecological mismatch or hybrid or phenotype to environment.
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13
Q

Do you always need local adaption for speciation and reproductive isolation?

A

No genetic drift alone can result in isolation and later speciation, but adaptive evolution speeds up the process.

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14
Q

what is ecological isolation?

A

Local adaptation can lead to isolation and might speed things up, when they try to come back together, the barriers won’t let them. This is termed ecological isolation.

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15
Q

What causes adaptations?

A
  1. Ecological opportunities (Abundant resources, Few competitors)
  2. Origin of Key innovation
  3. High rates of speciation. (b/c without reproduction isolation, speciation cannot occur)
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16
Q

What can reverse speciation to merge two groups into one?

A

Exchange of genes between the two groups (Hybridization)

Hybridization can result in complex variation in patterns.

17
Q

What is polyploidy?

A

An organism ends up with two sets of chromosomes from both the species or from the same species.

18
Q

What is allopolyploid?

A

Arises from duplicate karyotypes following hybridization between species.

19
Q

What is autopolyploid?

A

Arises from duplicated karyotype within a species ( non-disjunction)

20
Q

What is the significance of polyploidy?

A
  1. They are reproductively isolated from their diploid relatives
  2. They have new phenotype
  3. High Vigor: Often show very high fitness

4.