BIOL 211 Lecture Notes - Lecture 20: Species Problem, Species, Genetic Divergence

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Adaptation and eventual speciation are driven by four primary evolutionary processes . If gene flow ends, allele frequencies in isolated population are free to diverge. The populations begin to evolve independently of each other. Divergence (changes in allele frequencies) may occur as a result of mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. This genetic divergence may eventually lead to speciation. Speciation results from: genetic isolation, lack of gene flow, genetic divergence due to selection, drift, and mutation. Speciation is a splitting event that creates two or more distinct species from a single ancestral group. A species is defined as an evolutionarily independent population or group of populations. Biologists commonly use three approaches for identifying species: the biological species concept. Different species are reproductively isolated from each other (reproduction: the morphospecies concept (the way it looks, physical characteristics, the phylogenetic species concept (the way its genes are set up) Means that things are reproductively isolated from each other.

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