1 / 29

-11.3 - 11.5 - 11.6 -

-11.3 - 11.5 - 11.6 -. Mechanisms of Evolution Speciation Through Isolation Patterns of Evolution. Think About It:. 1776 United States Became Independent Where were the original settlers from? Was there an abundance of variation in this population?

Download Presentation

-11.3 - 11.5 - 11.6 -

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. -11.3 - 11.5 - 11.6 - Mechanisms of Evolution Speciation Through Isolation Patterns of Evolution

  2. Think About It: • 1776 United States Became Independent • Where were the original settlers from? • Was there an abundance of variation in this population? • How has immigration had an effect on genetic variation in the US? • Leads to increased genetic variation in the population by adding new alleles to the gene pool.

  3. Gene Flow • Defined: • The movement of alleles from one population to another. • Break it Down: • New Alleles to new population, loss of alleles in another. • Increases genetic variation. • How does it affect nearby populations? • What does a lack of gene flow lead to?

  4. Genetic Drift • Small populations more likely to be affected by random chance. • Allele frequency changes due to chance is called genetic drift. • Two processes cause pop. to become small enough for this phenomenon: • Bottleneck effect • Founder Effect

  5. Bottleneck Effect • Defined: • Genetic drift that occurs after an event greatly reduces the size of a population.

  6. Founder Effect • Genetic drift due to a small number of individuals of a population colonizing a new area.

  7. Effects of Genetic Drift • Loss of genetic variation. • Less likely to be able to adapt to changes • Lethal alleles can become more common in gene pool.

  8. Effect of Mating • Males: • Sperm production is constant, .: they are less selective in the mate they choose. • More chances = less selective • Females: • Production is limited in every reproductive cycle. • Less chances = more selective. • Sexual selection: • Certain traits increase mating success.

  9. Intra/Intersexual Selection • Intrasexual: • Competition among males. • Intersexual: • Males display traits that attract female. • http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/planet-earth-jungles-birds-of-paradise.html • Some traits are not adapted for survival.

  10. Brain Break #1 • The sun’s surface is approx: 5505 degrees Celsius. Keep this in mind. • If you are standing next to a hot stove you can feel the heat. • As you get farther away you should feel less heat. • That is basic science, the farther you are from a heat source the less it affects you. • The Solar Corona (an area not to far from the sun) has a temperature of 1.5 million degrees Celsius. • How is this possible?

  11. 11.5 Speciation Through Isolation • How do we know that a miniature poodle and a great dane are the same species? • At what point would the two breeds become separate species?

  12. Isolation of Populations: • If gene flow stops, populations are isolated. • Adaptation is never ending • Leads to gene pool changes. • Over time, changes add up & isolated populations become more and more genetically different • Behavior and phenotypes may change as well.

  13. Reproductive Isolation • Defined: • When members of different populations can no longer mate successfully with one another. • Analyze: • The final step in becoming separate species. • Discuss: • Talk with your neighbor for 1 minute and come up with an example of Isolation in nature. Be prepared to share! 60 Seconds starts NOW!

  14. Speciation Socially Awkward Penguin • Defined: • The rise of two or more species from one existing species • BUT Mr. Wilson…..! • How does isolation occur so that new species can be formed?! • Great Question! There are three ways that populations can become isolated! Behavioral Barriers Temporal Barriers Geographic Barriers

  15. Behavioral Isolation • Behavior changes can prevent mating between populations. • Defined: • Isolation caused by differences in courtship or mating behaviors. • Examples: • Fireflies flash patterns • Chemical scents • Courtship songs/dances with birds

  16. Geographic Isolation • Defined: • Physical barriers that divid a population into two or more groups. • What kind of barriers you ask? • Rivers, mountains, rivers, anything! • Examples: • Pacific/Atlantic species separated by the Panama Isthmus • Shrimp • Grand Canyon & Squirrels Just pretend they’re shrimp OK?!

  17. Temporal Isolation • Defined: • When timing prevents reproduction between populations. • Courtship period • Time of Day • Time of Year • Based on competition • Example:

  18. Temporal Isolation American Toad Mates Early Summer Fowlers Toad Mates Late Summer

  19. Brain Break #2 : I Will Try to Read Your Mind! • No Guarantees & You Have to Be Good at Math! • Pick a Number between 1 and 10. • Multiply it by 9 • Add the two Digits of the resulting number together (if you picked 1 just deal with it) • Now Subtract 5 From it…. • You should have a number now…think of the corresponding letter in the alphabet (A=1, B=2, etc.)

  20. Brain Break #2 : I Will Try to Read Your Mind! • Pick a country that starts with that letter. Any Country… So if you had F, Finland would work. • Once you have your country use the last letter of that country and think of an animal. Finland = D = Dog • Once you have your animal take the last letter of that animals name and think of a color. Dog = G = Green! • You Have it?....ok here I go…

  21. 11.6 - Patterns of Evolution • Mutation and Genetic Drift cannot be predicted. • Random Events • Natural Selection is NOT random. • Beneficial traits increase survival • Natural Selection has direction • But this direction is controlled by the environment NOT the population

  22. Convergent Evolution • Scenario: • Zombie Apocalypse • Zombies will also eat small rats • Humans or Rats with tough skin pose a challenge to zombie rotted teeth. • Both species begin to develop similar characteristics in their skin making it tougher. • Convergent Evolution • Shark/fish tails, bird / butterfly feathers (analogous structures).

  23. Divergent Evolution • Defined: • When closely related species evolve in different directions.

  24. Coevolution • Sometimes a change in one species can result in a change in another. • Coevolution: • The process by which two or more species evolve in response to changes in each other. • Example: • Stinging Ants & The Bull-thorn acacia

  25. Coevolution in competition • Competitive species can also coevolve: • Plants developing defense chemicals to avoid consumption by herbivores. • Crabs eat snails  snails develop bigger spiked shells  crabs develop more powerful claws … etc

  26. Extinction • Defined: • The elimination of a species from earth. • How? • Failure to adapt, hunting, fishing, etc.

  27. Speciation follows a Pattern • Punctuated Equillibrium • Episodes of speciation occur suddenly • Followed by long periods of little evolutionary change. • Adaptive Radiation • Diversification of an ancestor into many descendant species.

  28. End of Notes

More Related