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Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends

Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends. AP Biology: Chapter 19. Key Concepts:. All species that have ever lived are related Macroevolution refers to patterns, trends, and rates of change among lineages over geologic time

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Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends

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  1. Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends AP Biology: Chapter 19 Starr & Taggart – 11th Edition

  2. Key Concepts: • All species that have ever lived are related • Macroevolution refers to patterns, trends, and rates of change among lineages over geologic time • Fossil and geologic records and radiometric dating of rocks provide evidence of macroevolution Chapter 19

  3. Key Concepts: • Anatomical comparisons help reconstruct patterns of change through time • Biochemical comparisons also provide evidence of macroevolution • Diversity characterizes the distribution of species through time • Taxonomy is concerned with identifying and naming new species Chapter 19

  4. Macroevolution • Large scale patterns, trends and rates of change among families and other more inclusive groups of species. Chapter 19

  5. What is a Species? A mixed herd of zebroids & horses. Zebroids – are interspecies hybrids (horses & zebras) Chapter 19

  6. What is a Species? ♂ & ♀ fish • Morphological Species Concept • Based on appearance alone • Biological Species Concept • A species is one or more populations of individuals that are interbreeding under naturalconditions and producing fertile offspring, and are reproductively isolated from other such populations Two plants of the same species Chapter 19

  7. Species Example • Lions and tigers do not meet in the wild, so don’t interbreed; in captivity can mate to produce a liger (sterile) Chapter 19

  8. Reproductive Isolation • Cornerstone of the biological species concept • Speciation is the attainment of reproductive isolation • Reproductive isolation arises as a by-product of genetic change Chapter 19

  9. Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms • Any heritable feature of body, form, functioning, or behavior that prevents breeding between one or more genetically divergent populations • Prezygotic or Postzygotic Prezygotic- Mechanical isolation Chapter 19

  10. Types of Isolation Chapter 19

  11. Isolating Mechanisms Chapter 19

  12. Pre-Zygotic Isolation Temporal- cicada • Mating or zygote formation is blocked • Temporal Isolation • Behavioral Isolation • Mechanical Isolation • Ecological Isolation • Gamete Mortality Behavioral - albatross Chapter 19

  13. Post-Zygotic Isolation • Takes effect after hybrid zygotes form • Zygotic mortality - Egg is fertilized but zygote or embryo dies • Hybrid inviability - First generation hybrid forms but shows low fitness • Hybrid infertility - Hybrid is fully or partially sterile Chapter 19

  14. Genetic Divergence • Gradual accumulation of differences in the gene pools of genetically separated populations • Natural selection, genetic drift and mutation can contribute to divergence • Gene flow counters genetic divergence Chapter 19

  15. Mechanisms of Speciation • Allopatric speciation • Sympatric speciation • Parapatric speciation Chapter 19

  16. Allopatric Speciation • Physical barrier prevents gene flow between populations of a species • Effectiveness of barrier varies with species • Archipelago hotbed of speciation Chapter 19

  17. Allopatric Speciation on Archipelagos (Island Chain) Chapter 19 Hawaiian Honeycreepers

  18. Hawaiian Honeycreepers Chapter 19

  19. Allopatric Speciation • Physical separation between populations promotes genetic changes that eventually lead to speciation. Chapter 19

  20. Speciation without a Barrier • Sympatric speciation • Species form within the home range of the parent species • Parapatric speciation • Neighboring populations become distinct species while maintaining contact along a common barrier Chapter 19

  21. Sympatric Speciation • New species forms within home range • Polyploidy leads to speciation in plants • Self-fertilization and asexual reproduction Chapter 19

  22. Sympatric Speciation • A species forms within the home range of an existing species, in the absence of a physical barrier. A lake in West Africa in which 9 species of cichlids (a small fish) evolved. Chapter 19

  23. Speciation by Polyploidy • Change in chromosome number (3n, 4n, etc.) • Offspring with altered chromosome number cannot breed with parent population • Common mechanism of speciation in flowering plants Polyploidy cotton Chapter 19

  24. Allopatric vs. SympatricSpeciation Chapter 19

  25. Parapatric Speciation • Neighboring populations become distinct species while maintaining contact along a common border, the hybrid zone. Bullock’s oriole Baltimore oriole Chapter 19

  26. Models of Speciation Models of speciation Chapter 19

  27. Patterns of Change in a Lineage • Cladogenesis • Branching pattern • Lineage splits, isolated populations diverge • Anagenesis • No branching • Changes occur within single lineage • Gene flow throughout process Chapter 19

  28. extinction (branch ended before present) new species branch point (a time of divergence, speciation) a new species branch point (a time of divergence, speciation) dashed line (only sketchy evidence of presumed evolutionary relationship) a single lineage a single lineage Evolutionary Trees Chapter 19

  29. Gradual Model • Speciation model in which species emerge through many small morphological changes that accumulate over a long time period • Fits well with evidence from certain lineages in fossil record Time Punctuated equilibrium Gradualism Chapter 19

  30. Punctuation Model • Speciation model in which most changes in morphology are compressed into brief period near onset of divergence • Supported by fossil evidence in some lineages Chapter 19

  31. Adaptive Radiation • Burst of divergence • Single lineage gives rise to many new species • New species fill vacant adaptive zone • Adaptive zone is “way of life” Chapter 19

  32. Extinction • Irrevocable loss of a species • Mass extinctions have played a major role in evolutionary history • Fossil record shows 20 or more large-scale extinctions • Reduced diversity is followed by adaptive radiation Chapter 19

  33. Who Survives? • Species survival is to some extent random • Asteroids have repeatedly struck Earth, destroying many lineages • Changes in global temperature favor lineages that are widely distributed Mass extinctions Chapter 19

  34. Identifying SpeciesPast and Present • Taxonomy – field of biology concerned with identifying, naming and classifying species • Somewhat subjective • Devised by Carl von Linne • Assigning species names • Binomial nomenclature system • Genus (generic) and Species (specific) • Higher Taxa • Family, Order, Class, Phylum, and Kingdom Chapter 19

  35. Phylogeny • The scientific study of evolutionary relationships among species • Practical applications • Allows predictions about the needs or weaknesses of one species on the basis of its known relationship to another Chapter 19

  36. Examples of Classification Chapter 19

  37. How Many Kingdoms? • Whittaker’s Five-Kingdom Scheme (1969) • Monera • Protista • Fungi • Plantae • Animalia Chapter 19

  38. Six Kingdom Scheme • Carl Woese • Includes the Archaebacteria Eubacteria Archaebacteria Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia Chapter 19

  39. Three Domain Scheme • Favored by microbiologists • Eubacteria • Archaebacteria • Eukaryotes EUBACTERIA (Bacteria) ARCHAEBACTERIA (Archaea) EUKARYOTES (Eukarya) Chapter 19

  40. Taxon Traits (Characters) ConstructingACladogram Jaws Limbs Hair Lungs Tail Shell Lamprey - - - - + - Turtle + + - + + + Cat + + + + + - + + + + - - Gorilla Lungfish + - - + + - Trout + - - - + - Human + + + + - - Taxon Traits (Characters) Jaws Limbs Hair Lungs Tail Shell Lamprey 0 0 0 0 1 0 Turtle 1 1 0 1 1 1 Cat 1 1 1 1 1 0 Please note: the tail column was changed as it was incorrect in the text. 1 1 1 1 0 0 Gorilla Lungfish 1 0 0 1 1 0 Trout 1 0 0 0 1 0 Human 1 1 1 1 0 0 Chapter 19

  41. Constructing a Cladogram turtle, gorilla, trout, cat, lungfish, human lamprey jaws Chapter 19

  42. Constructing a Cladogram turtle, gorilla, cat, lungfish, human trout lamprey lungs jaws Chapter 19

  43. Constructing a Cladogram trout lungfish lamprey turtle, gorilla, cat, human limbs lungs jaws Chapter 19

  44. Constructing a Cladogram trout lungfish turtle gorilla, cat, human lamprey hair limbs lungs jaws Chapter 19

  45. Constructing a Cladogram trout lungfish turtle cat gorilla human lamprey tail loss hair limbs lungs jaws Chapter 19

  46. A Cladogram Constructing a Cladogram Chapter 19

  47. Evolutionary Tree ANIMALS PLANTS arthropods chordates FUNGI conifers flowering plants annelids round-worms ginkgos sac club echino-derms mollusks fungi fungi cycads horsetails rotifers zygospore- ferns forming flatworms fungi cnidarians lycophytes bryophytes sponges chlorophytes chytrids green algae amoeboid PROTISTANS protozoans (stramenopiles) red brown algae ciliates (alveolates) algae chrysophytes sporozoans oomycotes ? dinoflagellates crown of eukaryotes euglenoids (rapid divergences) slime molds kinetoplastids parabasalids (e.g., Trichomonas) EUBACTERIA spirochetes diplomonads ARCHAEBACTERIA (e.g., Giardia) extreme Gram-positive bacteria chlamydias halophiles methanogens cyanobacteria proteobacteria extreme thermophiles Chapter 19 molecular origin of life

  48. In Conclusion • Macroevolution is the study of patterns, trends, or rates of change among groups of species over long periods of time • There is extensive evidence of evolution based on similarities and differences in body form, function, behavior, and biochemistry • Completeness of fossil records are variable • Fossil and geologic record show that such changes have influenced evolution Chapter 19

  49. In Conclusion • Comparative morphology reveals similarities in embryonic development and identified homologous structures • Comparative biochemistry has identified similarities and differences among species • Taxonomists identify, name, and classify species Chapter 19

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