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Macroevolution

Macroevolution. BIO 1113/1114 Oklahoma City Community College. Dennis Anderson. Species. 1.8 million species have been identified Probably 5 to 10 times that many are yet to be discovered. What is a Species?.

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Macroevolution

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  1. Macroevolution BIO 1113/1114 Oklahoma City Community College Dennis Anderson

  2. Species 1.8 million species have been identified Probably 5 to 10 times that many are yet to be discovered

  3. What is a Species? “Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups.” Barred Owl Spotted Owl

  4. How Do New Species Arise? • Branching evolution occurs when a single “parent” species diverges into two species, Speciation 4

  5. Population A Population B Gene Flow

  6. Population A No Gene Flow Population B

  7. Many Years Later Population A No Gene Flow Population B 7

  8. If gene flow is maintained between separate populations, they will experience similar allele frequency changes, meaning they will evolve together. 8

  9. If gene flow is drastically reduced for a long time period then populations will evolve separately. 9

  10. Allopatric Speciation • There is no gene flow between the two geographically isolated populations • Each population changes with time • Changes result in new species.

  11. The original populationstarted in the north andmigrated southward. The population split tothe east and west of theCentral Valley. Thentwo populations beganto evolve independently. Evolution ofeastern population. Central Valley Evolution ofwestern population. The east and west populationscame back together in SouthernCalifornia, but could no longerinterbreed (or produced infertilehybrid offspring). Figure 18.3

  12. Sympatric Speciation • Different individuals may occupy different parts of the same environment • They only breed in the areas they occupy

  13. Sympatric Sepciation Amphilophus zaliosus Amphilophus citrinellus

  14. Polyploidy More than 2 sets of chromosomes

  15. Polyploidy in the Evening Primrose • Oenothera lamarckiana • 14 chromosomes • Oenotheragigas • 28 chromosomes

  16. Macroevolution • Evolution that results in new species

  17. Evolution • Microevolution • Evolutionary changes within a gene pool of a population • Small changes in the organisms • Macroevolution • Evolutionary changes are significant enough to produce new species • Microevolutionary changes eventually result in macroevolution

  18. Adaptive Radiation

  19. Phylogenetic Tree

  20. Convergent Evolution • Whales are mammals • Evolved a fish like body

  21. Divergent Evolution Mammal Reptile Bird 23

  22. Classifying Living Things • In science, a two-name or binomial nomenclature is used for each species. • The first name designates the genus, or group of closely related organisms, that the species is a member of. • The second name is specific to the species. 24

  23. Carl Linnaeus 1707-1778 • Father of taxonomy • Binomial nomenclature

  24. Felisdomestica

  25. Linnaean System of Classification Kingdom (Animalia) Phylum (Chordata) Class (Mammalia) Order (Carnivora) Family (Felidae) Genus (Felis) Species (Felisdomestica) Figure 18.11

  26. Cladogram Derived Ancestral

  27. hagfish lizard deer lion seal Figure 18.14  A Simple Cladogram aquatic habitat carnivorous feeding mammary glands Derivedcharacters tetrapod structure 29

  28. The End

  29. Western meadowlark & eastern

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