T/F
species are grouped into distinct species because there is a lot of variation
true
birds = size, shape, colouration, feeding habits, nesting habits
what does interbreeding help do
what would happen without interbreeding
List the barriers to interbreeding
Prevent Mating
- geographic isolation
- mechanical isolation
- behavioural isolation
- gametic isolation
- temporal isolation
After Mating
- hybrid inviability
- hybrid sterility
- hybrid breakdown
Explain temporal isolation
different reproductive timings - cannot interbreed
- some flowers germinate in the summer and winter
explain behavioural isolation
animals not having the correct scent, courtship dance, appearance, etc for the female to allow mating
explain mechanical isolation
explain hybrid inviability
T/F
barriers to interbreeding are likely by-products of changes occurring when a population has been geographically separated
true
- when darwins finches were exposed to new locations they = a new population = distinct
what allows new populations to thrive in new locations
explain geographic variation with a human example
humans = numerous racial differences and skin pigmentations which = adaptations to living in different continents of the world - close to the equator = darker
what is migration
when some of the population diverges or remains
what happens to the genes when a population successfully interbreeds with a new population as a long-term effect
genes = homogenized = genetic differences between populations are reduced making them more similar over longer periods of time
T/F
if a species has low mobility it means it has high migration rates
false
low mobility = low migration
high mobility = high migration - can spread genes faster over larger areas
what is an example of a local adaptation
strong NS can make a species adapt to extreme environmental extremes
- plants that grow near mines with metal in the soil are selected very strongly for those who can withstand the metal in the soil
- now these plants thrive in the toxicity = metal tolerant and resistant
- without toxicity, they fail
give an example of gradual changes
T/F species in different geographic locations experience different pressures
true
different locations = new challenges =
different adaptations = divergence
give an example of a selection pressure take can produce different adaptations to certain locations
humans in africa regions = malaria resistant
what is genetic drift
differences among populations through a random drift without any selective advantage
what’s an example of a genetic difference with no visible phenotypic difference
blood types
type A, B, O shows geographic variation
type b = India
type O = more frequent in some regions
what is gradual divergence
populations at the end of the species range have had a lot of divergence and changes to the point where they cannot interbreed if the intermediate population becomes extinct
- if the intermediate population becomes extinct then the species = distinct
what is a hint of reproductive isolation?
sterility of hybrid males
T/F early signs of speciation are hinted at through geographic isolation
true
- it the beginning of speciation (bc if they were to ever come back to the original location they could potentially reproduce again)
- having reproductive isolation completes divergence
In the situation with M. Lweisii and M. Carinalias, why does NS drive reproductive isolation
these are the same species but with different genus
they have different pollinator behaviours = which significantly contribute to reproductive isolation
- as pollination systems diverge - NS favours reproductive isolation because as each environmental adaptation is overcome it changes the genetic composition of the population