What is a species and where do they come from? Flashcards
Some species are relatively easy to distinguish from one another and others are harder to classify
This is most striking when you have a group of species that radiated relatively recently like these cichlid fish species in Lake Malawi.
See diagram in notes: oval showing 3 male variations and one female phenotype colour blocks in the tree designate the main display colours of males in 3 separate local population.
The 3 small ovals show that on phylogenetic testing the species M. zebra had occurred 3 different places in the tree and in 3 different locations in the lake despite appearing physically the same
these are an example of cryptic species
Allender et al 2003
Species concepts: The biological species concept (BSC)
The biological species concept (BSC)
‘species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups’
(^Quote from Mayr’s 1963 book: Animal Species and Evolution)
Concept was introduced by Theodosius Dobzhansky in 1937 and subsequently championed and developed by Ernst Mayr.
Issues with BSCI:
- Can be quite hard to determine if there is on-going reproduction
- e.g. between individuals of the same species from different populations.
- Sexual recombination of chromosomes in species with two sexes mixes genomes and unifies the gene pool, but not all species are sexual.
- Some species, although morphologically and behaviourally distinct may be able to hybridise (possibly with reduced fitness).
- Time limit - can only observe who mates with whom for contemporary organisms – inference for historical populations indirect
Species concepts: The phylogenetic species concept (PSC)
The phylogenetic species concept (PSC)
‘a monophyletic group composed of the smallest diagnosable cluster of individual organisms within which there is a parental pattern of ancestry and descent’.
Defined by Joel Cracraft in 1983 in a book called Current Ornithology edited by R.F. Johnston
Issues with the PSC
- The resolution of the phylogeny depends on the type and quantity of characters used – very fine-scale splitting possible.
- Recent species may still be polyphyletic for genetic markers, as it takes time for lineages to ‘sort’ and become monophyletic. This is incomplete lineage sorting – they don’t look different when observed on a phylogenetic tree e.g. as seen in Darwin’s finches
- This method may be informative about current gene flow or hybridisation, but it depends on the age of the lineage and the type of character used to construct the phylogeny. Consider how you construct it and methods.
Advantages:
- PSC can consider historical relationships among taxa, and identify ‘cryptic’ species that are morphologically identical.
More background in constructing tree lineages
Basic structure of a phylogeny
- Ancestral Node or root of the Tree
- branches
- internal nodes (represent hypothetical ancestors of the OTUs)
- Terminal Nodes
^ OTUs - operational taxonomic units
phylogeny is a hypothesis
phylogeny is JUST A HYPOTHESIS only as good as the data input provided – the ‘best’ tree form must be discerned.
To make the history of the group clearer we may force an outgroup
Defining an outgroup allows some inference to be made about the course of evolution over time – which organisms are ancestral (basal) to another.
e.g. Hippopotamus may be outgrouped from whale species
Monophyly, paraphyly, polyphyly
see diagram in notes: On the left, taxa 1&2 can be termed ‘monophyletic’, while 2,3&4 in the middle figure occupy one lineage, plus part of a second lineage, and so are ‘paraphyletic’. In the final example the group (2&3) is shared across two lineages, and so is ‘polyphyletic’.
PSC application by Herbert et al & The barcode of life method
An initiative has been launched worldwide building on a very simple version of the PSC – using just one mitochondrial DNA gene (COI) and a single ‘phenetic’ phylogeny method (neighbour joining).
See his website barcode of life
^The method has some problems, especially for species discovery, but it can be effective with some known taxa, as indicated in this study identifying 260 bird species from North America (Herbert et al. (2004) PLoS Biology e312)
Species criteria and distinguishability
Separation – species should be clearly separated from each other regardless of the metric (morphological, behavioural, genetic, geographic) or the degree.
Cohesion – species should be genetically and ecologically internally cohesive, meaning that individuals can interbreed and occupy the same habitat.
Monophyly – organisms within a species should share a single most recent common ancestor.
Distinguishability – this can be broken down into three levels:
1)Diagnosible traits are unique to that species and distinguish it from all others
(these may be synapomorphies)
2) Phenetic clusters describe groups of traits that while individually may not distinguish the species, collectively they can
3) Genetic clusters can identify different species even if they are morphologically - indistinguishable (‘cryptic species’)
How does speciation proceed? Key issues
- Can the same processes that lead to evolution within a population – genetic drift and natural selection – drive speciation on their own?
-What starts the process?
- How important are sudden events (genetic, developmental or environmental) generating new species by ‘saltation’ (I.e. a big leap or ‘hopeful monster’)?
process of speciation
see diagram: Process of speciation often depends on environmental factors and time – a continuous series of stages (see Nosil et al. 2008. Trends in Ecol. & Evol. 24, 145-156)
Geography is a major factor determining the potential for gene flow among populations.
(allo, para and sympatry)
If separated by some distance (allopatry) then the opportunity for dispersal is clearly reduced. Understanding the origins of populations next to each other (parapatry) or in the same geographic range (sympatry) is harder.
Allopatry - a species separated by an abiotic barrier
e.g. the separation of the continents after pangea, mountain ranges, or changes in ranges during glacial periods
Parapatry – species next to each other
Sympatry – species in the same geographic range (in the same place) – difficult to distinguish between
Isolation in allopatry via vicariance
Isolation in allopatry (separate homes), can come about when habitats change to create a new barrier separating subsections of a previously contiguous population (this is called ‘vicariance’)
Such as in the continental drift dispersal of Pangaea. Some species ranges were broken up leading to isolated populations which evolved differently and speciated.
Another important mechanism for allopatry is the establishment of refugia.
For example, during the last glacial maximum (LGM) about 20,000 years ago, habitat was impacted across Europe forcing species adapted to the north into southern refugia.
http://www.stclairresearch.com/content/path.html
After the barrier (in this case glacier) recedes, populations may come into secondary contact, or follow different migration corridors back to their original habitat. For the European glacial refugia example see Schmitt & Varga (2012. Front. Zool. 9, 22) and Hewitt (1999, Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 68, 87-112).
Travel paths have been mapped genetically for some species.
Peripatric speciation
Another important process is island biogeography causing ‘peripatric’ speciation
Fleischer et al. (1998, Mol. Ecol. 7, 533-545) showed that the speciation of birds in the amakihi group followed the timeline for the volcanic origin of the Hawaiian Islands.
For Hawaiian fruit flies (Drosophila sp.), the process seems to have involved founder events: small groups or even single gravid females founding new islands and starting a new species – sometimes called ‘peripatric’ speciation.