BI SC 002 Lecture Notes - Lecture 37: Speciation, Reproductive Isolation, Gene Pool

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14 Nov 2016
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Members belonging to the same species can interbreed and produce fertile offspring: not based on appearance. When some members of a population can no longer interbreed successfully with others: speciation has occurred. Speciation describes the formation of new species. The biological species concept is not one size fits all . Cannot be applied to asexually reproducing organisms. Cannot be applied to organism that are already extinct. Some organisms do not breed in nature: but have the potential to do so in captivity. An inter-breeding population belonging to one species share a common: gene pool . If the population becomes divided: different evolutionary changes can lead to genetic divergence over time. An accumulation of differences in the gene pools will result in: the two groups being unable to successfully breed. Allopatric speciation: physical separation of populations. Diverge from each other: reproductive isolation, populations occupy different geographical areas. Sympatric speciation: more rare, separations are:

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