BSC 108 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Allopatric Speciation, Sympatric Speciation, Species

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Evolution and our world: evolution is how organisms change over time, so far, we"ve examined how natural selection and mutations affect, now, we go one step further, to understanding how evolution has shaped life populations on earth. Can be measured from one generation to the next: macroevolution. Major changes in the history of life. Biological species concept: a population or group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed with one another in nature to produce fertile offspring, reproductively isolated from other such groups. How do new species form: the gene pools of two or more populations must be separated from each other, allopatric speciation. Usually associated with a geographic members of two populations from mating with one another: sympatric speciation. Involves independent evolution of the populations after the barrier arises. Species evolve without geographic isolation species remain together wit. Probably associated with a genetic barrier due to a single mutational potential to interbreed event.

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