Topic 5 Flashcards

1
Q

What is microevolution?

A

evolution at the population level

occurs mainly through selection (which results in adaptation) or drift

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2
Q

What is macroevolution?

A

evolutionary change above species level

origin of complex novel characteristics

appearance of higher taxa

mass extinctions

speciation

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3
Q

What is the biological species concept?

A

consists of a group of actually or potentially interbreeding individuals that are reproductively isolated from other such groups

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4
Q

What are four problems with the biological species concept?

A
  1. Only applies to sexually reproducing species (what about asexual species?)
  2. Suggests that two different species would never mate and produce offspring (what about successful hybrids?)
  3. Ecological species concept: species is a set of organisms adapted to a particular set of resources, called a niche, in the environment (at extremes of distributions “species” differs)
  4. Phylogenetic species concept: evolutionary history (some populations are more unique than rest)
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5
Q

What is reproductive isolation?

A

isolating mechanisms are required to maintain reproductive isolation between populations

pre-reproductive isolating mechanisms: prevent two individuals from forming a zygote, prezygotic

post-reproductive isolating mechanisms: occur after zygote has formed, postzyogotic

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6
Q

What are prezygotic isolation mechanisms?

A

ecological (habitat) selection: tree canopy vs grass

temporal isolation: different time of day/season

behavioral isolation: courtship patterns, pheromones

mechanical isolation: anatomically incompatible

gametic isolation: sperm and egg cannot fuse

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7
Q

What are postzygotic mechanisms?

A

zygote death

hybrid infertility: offspring of cannot reproduce

hybrid unviability: lower fitness, survival and/or reproduction

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8
Q

What is speciation?

A

the formation of new and distinct species in the course of evolution

the process by which one genetically-cohesive population splits into two or more reproductively-isolated populations

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9
Q

What is cladogensis?

A

the branching or splitting of a lineage (like a node on a cladogram)

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10
Q

What is anagenesis?

A

evolutionary change within a lineage, resulting in differences between sister lineages

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11
Q

What is allopatric speciation?

A

the first step toward reproductive isolation happens when a single population becomes subdivided by a geographical barrier(s)

examples: mountains, water, natural disasters, habitat fragmentation

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12
Q

What is sympatric speciation?

A

subgroups can form within a continuous habitat

if individuals in the subgroup stop mating with individuals of the larger population, they may eventually become a new species

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13
Q

How do species become reproductively isolated?

A
  1. A single population becomes subdivided (geographically, physically, or within a habitat)
  2. More likely to mate with individuals of their subgroup, gene flow is greatly reduced
  3. Meanwhile, microevolution (by natural selection, genetic drift, mutation, non-random mating) is independently working on the subgroups
  4. The separated groups eventually evolve and adapt to their local environment, becoming different in form, physiology, or behavior, so that mating no longer occurs between them
  5. Speciation event has occured
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14
Q

What are hybrids?

A

individual formed by mating between unlikely forms, usually genetically differentiated populations or species

if hybrid individuals are less viable or less reproductively successful than non-hybrid individuals, the two species are considered to be good (distinct) species

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15
Q

What is introgression?

A

incorporation of genes from other species into gene pool

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16
Q

What is a reinforcement change in hybrid zones over time?

A

hybrids are less fit than either purebred species, the species continue to diverge until hybridization can no longer occur

17
Q

What is a fusion change in hybrid zones over time?

A

reproductive barriers weaken until the species become one

18
Q

What is a stability change in hybrid zones over time?

A

fit hybrids continue to be produced

19
Q

What is gradualism?

A

slow differentiation by natural selection over many generations

20
Q

What is punctuated equilibrium?

A

speciation happens rapidly followed by relatively long periods of stasis (no change)