Speciation and Macroevolution Unit 4, Topic 2 Flashcards
What is speciation?
- the evolution of one or more new species from an ancestral species
- a single species can diverge and produce several new species
- formation of new species following an event that splits lineage
events include geographical, morphological, behavioral, or reproductive isolation of a population.
What is macroevolution?
- the accumulation of small changes in phenotypes over time (essentially microevolution overtime)
- can result in a new species being formed.
What are the 4 types of diversification/patterns?
- divergent evolution
- convergent evolution
- parallel evolution
- coevolution
what is divergent evolution?
- related species evolve new traits over time, away from the common ancestor, to give rise to new species
groups from the same species become isolated -> isolation stops gene flow between separated populations -> two groups evolve differently (diverge and become new species)
What is convergent evolution?
- unrelated organisms evolve similar adaptations in response to similar environmental pressures.
what is parallel evolution?
- when two species with a common ancestor evolve similar features independent of each other.
What is coevolution?
- evolutionary change in one species influences the evolution of another species.
What are the 5 types of mechanisms?
- mechanisms of isolation
- geographic mechanisms
- reproductive mechanisms
- spatial mechanisms
- temporal mechanisms
What is the mechanisms of isolation?
all reduce gene flow because of the two new populations can’t/don’t breed with each other, restricting the number of genes flowing between two populations - can lead to speciation (formation of new species)
What is the geographic mechanisms?
when physical barriers separate a population; a habitat is broken into smaller fragments of an environmental disaster decreases a population’s size, shrinks the habitat, and increases the mutation rate.
What is the reproductive mechanism?
There are two types of reproductive mechanisms:
pre-reproductive isolating mechanisms: prevent organisms from being able to interact to reproduce.
- geographic
-temporal - breed during different - seasons
- behavioural - different courtship - patterns
- morpholigical - different reproductive structures
- location - makes mates physically impossible
Post - reproductive isolating mechanisms: prevent fertilisation occurring or an embryo developing into viable offspring if fertilisation does occur
gamete mortality - gametes do not survive
zygote mortality - zygote forms but does not survive
hybrid sterility - adult offspring are formed but are infertile because they are unable to produce viable gametes.
what is spatial mechanism?
- occurs between two populations that are separated by a great distance.
- members will never meet and mate resulting in no gene flow between the populations
What is temporal mechanisms?
A mechanism that prevents species from mating due to the different times they breed.
What is reduced genetic diversity?
- when small number of individuals survive a major catastrophic event/quickly changing adverse environmental conditions
- surviving population is unlikely to carry all the alleles that were present in the original population
- resulting in low genetic diversity (smaller gene pool, reduced allele frequency)
- inbreeding reducing gene pool
- when there is low genetic variation, there is less chance of there being alleles that suit the selection pressure
- if no species has the right genetic variation, the species becomes extinct.
- the more genetically diverse a species is, the more readily they can adapt to changes because they have a greater range of genes and alleles suited for different environments.