EEMB 2 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Allopatric Speciation, Sympatric Speciation, Species Problem

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Central Question: How are species formed?
Biological Species Concept:
Species are groups of individuals which, when given an opportunity
under natural conditions, exchange hereditary material
Species are separated from one another by one or more reproductive isolation
mechanisms
There are 2 types of reproductive isolation mechanisms
Postzygotic isolation: Mating and fertilization are successful (syngamy
occurs), but the developing zygote dies prior to reproductive maturity or
is sterile
E.g. Horse x Zebra-sterile Zorse
Prezygotic isolation: Syngamy (fertilization) is prevented by
incompatibility due to:
Mating behavior
Reproductive anatomy, or
Reproductive physiology
There are two major forms of speciation that are based on geography:
Allopatric speciation: reproductive isolation evolves while populations of
a single species are physically isolated from one another due to a physical
barrier that prevents genetic exchange
Sympatric speciation: reproductive isolation evolves without an extrinsic
physical barrier to genetic exchange
I.e. while populations are at the same geographical location, or
different locations that are connected by migration
Allopatric speciation Model:
1. species spread over its geography range
2. Allopatric genetically differentiated populations of same species
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Document Summary

Species are groups of individuals which, when given an opportunity under natural conditions, exchange hereditary material. Species are separated from one another by one or more reproductive isolation mechanisms. There are 2 types of reproductive isolation mechanisms. Postzygotic isolation: mating and fertilization are successful (syngamy occurs), but the developing zygote dies prior to reproductive maturity or is sterile. Prezygotic isolation: syngamy (fertilization) is prevented by incompatibility due to: There are two major forms of speciation that are based on geography: Allopatric speciation: reproductive isolation evolves while populations of a single species are physically isolated from one another due to a physical barrier that prevents genetic exchange. Sympatric speciation: reproductive isolation evolves without an extrinsic physical barrier to genetic exchange. I. e. while populations are at the same geographical location, or different locations that are connected by migration. 1. species spread over its geography range.

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