BIOL 123 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Sympatric Speciation, Vegetative Reproduction, Reproductive Isolation

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29 Oct 2020
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Problem: any allele that might foster the isolation within a population to get into the rest of the population, and isolation won"t evolve. Evolutionary mechanism that helps sympatric speciation is disruptive selection. Eliminates intermediate individuals, with only extreme genotypes. Mating with only extreme genotypes will only have viable offspring, imposing selection on hybrids and intermediate individuals. Unlikely to occur due to natural selection enforcing reproductive isolation between extreme groups. Plants are often sterile, or never propogate by vegetative reproduction. Can produce instant speciation, without any geographical isolation. Tetraploid: normal sexual diploid plant species produces mutant offspring that have twice the normal number of chromosomes, which may be inviable or infertile. Rarely, a viable tetraploid is produced by outcrossing or selfing (self-fertilization) with production of diploid gametes. Tetraploid derivatives from diploid species is evident by haploid gametes produced by diploid parents, making hybrid zygotes triploid.

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