BSC 1011C
General Biology II
Dr. Graeme Lindbeck
glindbeck@valenciacollege.edu


The Origin of Species

Outline

A. What Is a Species?

  1. The biological species concept emphasizes reproductive isolation
  2. Prezygotic and postzygotic barriers isolate the gene pools of biological species
  3. The biological species concept has some major limitations
  4. Evolutionary biologists have proposed several alternative concepts of species

B. Modes of Speciation

  1. Allopatric speciation: Geographic barriers can lead to the origin of species
  2. Sympatric speciation:A new species can originate in the geographic midst of the parent species
  3. The punctuated equilibrium model has stimulated research on the tempo of speciation

C. From Speciation To Macroevolution

  1. Most evolutionary novelties are modified versions of older structures
  2. "Evo-devo": Genes that control development play a major role in evolution
  3. An evolutionary trend does not mean that evolution is goal oriented

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Introduction

Darwin recognized that the young Galapagos Islands were a place for the genesis of new species.

Evolutionary theory must also explain macroevolution, the origin of new taxonomic groups (new species, new genera, new families, new kingdoms)

Speciation is the keystone process in the origination of diversity of higher taxa.

The fossil record chronicles two patterns of speciation: anagenesis and cladogenesis.

Anagenesis is the accumulation of changes associated with the transformation of one species into another.

Cladogenesis, branching evolution, is the budding of one or more new species from a parent species.

Species is a Latin word meaning "kind" or "appearance".

Traditionally, morphological differences have been used to distinguish species.

Today, differences in body function, biochemistry, behavior, and genetic makeup are also used to differentiate species.

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1. The biological species concept emphasizes reproductive isolation

In 1942 Ernst Mayr enunciated the biological species concept to divide biological diversity.

Species are based on interfertility, not physical similarity.

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2. Prezygotic and postzygotic barriers isolate the gene pools of biological species

No single barrier may be completely impenetrable to genetic exchange, but many species are genetically sequestered by multiple barriers.

Prezygotic barriers impede mating between species or hinder fertilization of ova if members of different species attempt to mate.

Habitat isolation. Two organisms that use different habitats even in the same geographic area are unlikely to encounter each other to even attempt mating.

Behavioral isolation. Many species use elaborate behaviors unique to a species to attract mates.

Temporal isolation. Two species that breed during different times of day, different seasons, or different years cannot mix gametes.

Mechanical isolation. Closely related species may attempt to mate but fail because they are anatomically incompatible and transfer of sperm is not possible.

Gametic isolation occurs when gametes of two species do not form a zygote because of incompatibilities preventing fusion or other mechanisms.

If a sperm from one species does fertilize the ovum of another, postzygotic barriers prevent the hybrid zygote from developing into a viable, fertile adult.

Reduced hybrid viability. Genetic incompatibility between the two species may abort the development of the hybrid at some embryonic stage or produce frail offspring.

Reduced hybrid fertility. Even if the hybrid offspring are vigorous, the hybrids may be infertile and the hybrid cannot backbreed with either parental species.

Hybrid breakdown. In some cases, first generation hybrids are viable and fertile.

Reproductive barriers can occur before mating, between mating and fertilization, or after fertilization.

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3. The biological species concept has some major limitations

While the biological species concept has had important impacts on evolutionary theory, it is limited when applied to species in nature.

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4. Evolutionary biologists have proposed several alternative concepts of species

Several alternative species concepts emphasize the processes that unite the members of a species.

The ecological species concept defines a species in terms of its ecological niche, the set of environmental resources that a species uses and its role in a biological community.

The pluralistic species concept may invoke reproductive isolation or adaptation to an ecological niche, or use both in maintaining distinctive, cohesive groups of individuals.

The morphological species concept, the oldest and still most practical, defines a species by a unique set of structural features.

A more recent proposal, the genealogical species concept, defines a species as a set of organisms with a unique genetic history - one tip of the branching tree of life.

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B. Modes of Speciation

Two general modes of speciation are distinguished by the mechanism by which gene flow among populations is initially interrupted.

In allopatric speciation, geographic separation of populations restricts gene flow.

In sympatric speciation, speciation occurs in geographically overlapping populations when biological factors, such as chromosomal changes and nonrandom mating, reduce gene flow.

1. Allopatric speciation: geographic barriers can lead to the origin of species:

Several geological processes can fragment a population into two or more isolated populations.

How significant a barrier must be to limit gene exchange depends on the ability of organisms to move about.

The likelihood of allopatric speciation increases when a population is both small and isolated.

However, very few small, isolated populations will develop into new species; most will simply perish in their new environment.

A question about allopatric speciation is whether the separated populations have become different enough that they can no longer interbreed and produce fertile offspring when they come back in contact.

Ring species provide examples of what seem to be various stages in the gradual divergence of new species from common ancestors.

One example of a ring species is the salamander, Ensatina escholtzii, which probably expanded south from Oregon to California, USA.

At the northern end of the ring, the coastal and inland populations interbreed and produce viable offspring.

At the southern end of the ring, the coastal and inland populations do not interbreed even when they overlap.

Flurries of allopatric speciation occur on island chains where organisms that were dispersed from parent populations have founded new populations in isolation.

Organisms may be carried to these new habitats by their own locomotion, through the movements of other organisms, or through physical forces such as ocean currents or winds.

Later, individuals may have reached neighboring islands, where geographic isolation permitted additional speciation episodes.

The evolution of many diversely-adapted species from a common ancestor is called an adaptive radiation.

The Hawaiian Archipelago, 3500 miles from the nearest continent and composed of "young" volcanic islands, has experienced several examples of adaptive radiations by colonists.

While geographic isolation does prevent interbreeding between allopatric populations, it does not by itself constitute reproductive isolation.

The ability of prezygotic reproductive barriers to develop as a byproduct of adaptive divergence by allopatric populations has been demonstrated in fruitflies, Drosophila pseudoobscura, by Diane Dodd.

Females from populations raised on a starch medium preferred males from a similar nurturing environment over males raised in a maltose medium after several generations of isolation, demonstrating a prezygotic barrier to interbreeding.

Similarly, the ability of postzygotic reproductive barriers to develop in allopatric populations has been demonstrated by Robert Vickery in the monkey flower, Mimulus glabratus (a plant that has a very large range throughout the Americas).

In summary, in allopatric speciation, new species form when geographically isolated populations evolve reproductive barriers as a byproduct of genetic drift and natural selection to its new environment.

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2. Sympatric speciation: a new species can originate in the geographic midst of the parent species

In sympatric speciation, new species arise within the range of the parent populations.

An individual can have more that two sets of chromosomes from a single species if a failure in meiosis results in a tetraploid (4n) individual.

This autopolyploid mutant can reproduce with itself (self-pollination) or with other tetraploids.

It cannot mate with diploidsfrom the original population, because of abnormal meiosis by the triploid hybrids.

In the early 1900s, botanist Hugo de Vries produced a new primrose species, the tetraploid Oenotheria gigas, from the diploid Oenothera lamarckiana.

Another mechanism of producing polyploid individuals occurs when individuals are produced by the matings of two different species, an allopolyploid.

One mechanism for allopolyploid speciation in plants involves several cross-pollination events between two species of their offspring and perhaps a failure of meiotic disjunction to a viable fertile hybrid whose chromosome number is the sum of the chromosomes in the two parent species.

The origin of polypoid species is common and rapid enough that scientists have documented several such speciations in historical times.

Many plants important for agriculture are the products of polyploidy.

While polyploid speciation does occur in animals, other mechanisms also contribute to sympatric speciation in animals.

Sympatric speciation is one mechanism that has been proposed for the explosive adaptive radiation of almost 200 species of cichlid fishes in Lake Victoria, Africa.

Individuals of two closely related sympatric cichlid species will not mate under normal light because females have specific color preferences and males differ in color.

Sympatric speciation requires the emergence of some reproductive barrier that isolates a subset of the population without geographic separation from the parent population.

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3. The punctuated equilibrium model has stimulated research on the tempo of speciation

Traditional evolutionary trees diagram the diversification of species as a gradual divergence over long spans of time.

In the fossil record, many species appear as new forms rather suddenly (in geologic terms), persist essentially unchanged, and then disappear from the fossil record.

Darwin noted this when he remarked that species appear to undergo modifications during relatively short periods of their total existence and then remained essentially unchanged.

The sudden apparent appearance of species in the fossil record may reflect allopatric speciation.

In the punctuated equilibrium model, the tempo of speciation is not constant.

Under this model, changes may occur rapidly and gradually during the few thousands of generations necessary to establish a unique genetic identity.

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C. From Speciation To Macroevolution

Speciation is at the boundary between microevolution and macroevolution.

1. Most evolutionary novelties are modified versions of older structures

The Darwinian concept of "descent with modification" can account for the major morphological transformations of macroevolution.

The simplest eyes are just clusters of photoreceptors, pigmented cells sensitive to light.

Flatworms (Planaria) have a slightly more sophisticated structure with the photoreceptors cells in a cup-shaped indentation.

Complex eyes have evolved independently several times in the animal kingdom.

The range of the eye complexity in mollusks includes:

  1. a simple patch of photoreceptors found in some limpets,
  2. photoreceptors in an eye-cup,
  3. a pinhole camera-type eye in Nautilus,
  4. an eye with a primitive lens in some marine snails, and
  5. a complex camera-type eye in squid.

Evolutionary novelties can also arise by gradual refinement of existing structures for new functions.

Natural selection can only improve a structure in the context of its current utility, not in anticipation of the future.

An example of an exaptation is the changing function of lightweight, honey-combed bones of birds.

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2. "Evo-devo": Genes that control development play a major role in evolution

"Evo-devo" is a field of interdisciplinary research that examines how slight genetic divergences can become magnified into major morphological differences between species.

A particular focus are genes that program development by controlling the rate, timing, and spatial pattern of changes in form as an organism develops from a zygote to an adult.

Allometric growth tracks how proportions of structures change due to different growth rates during development.

Change the relative rates of growth even slightly, and you can change the adult from substantially.

Evolution of morphology by modification of allometric growth is an example of heterochrony, an evolutionary change in the rate or timing of developmental events.

Heterochrony appears to be responsible for differences in the feet of tree-dwelling versus ground-dwelling salamanders.

The feet of the tree-dwellers with shorter digits and more webbing may have evolved from a mutation in the alleles that control the timing of foot development.

Another form of heterochrony is concerned with the relative timing of reproductive development and somatic development.

If the rate of reproductive development accelerates compared to somatic development, then a sexually mature stage can retain juvenile structures - a process called paedomorphosis.

Macroevolution can also result from changes in gene that control the placement and spatial organization of body parts.

One class of homeotic genes, Hox genes, provide positional information in an animal embryo.

Their information prompts cells to develop into structure appropriate for a particular location.

One major transition in the evolution of vertebrates is the development of the walking legs of tetrapods from the fins of fishes.

Key events in the origin of vertebrates from invertebrates are associated with changes in Hox genes.

A second duplication of the two Hox clusters about 425 million years ago may have allowed for even more structural complexity.

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3. An evolutionary trend does not mean that evolution is not goal oriented

The fossil record seems to reveal trends in the evolution of many species and lineages.

For example, the evolution of the modern horse can be interpreted to have been a steady series of changes from a small, browsing ancestor (Hyracotherium) with four toes to modern horses (Equus) with only one toe per foot and teeth modified teeth for grazing on grasses.

It is possible to arrange a succession of animals intermediate between Hyracotherium and modern horses that shows trends toward increased size, reduced number of toes, and modifications of teeth for grazing.

If we look at all fossil horses, the illusion of coherent, progressive evolution leading directly to modern horses vanishes.

Differences among species in survival can also produce a macroevolutionary trend.

In the species selection model, developed by Steven Stanley, species are analogous to individuals.

The species that endure the longest and generate the greatest number of new species determine the direction of major evolutionary trends.

To the extent that speciation rates and species longevity reflect success, the analogy to natural selection is even stronger.

The appearance of an evolutionary trend does not imply some intrinsic drive toward a preordained state of being.

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