BIOL 1123 Lecture Notes - Lecture 23: Polyploid, Hybrid Zone, Cladogenesis

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The formation of new species - also called speciation - is caused by genetic changes in a particular group that make it different from the species from which it was derived. This is done by random mutations, other evolutionary mechanisms, interspecies mating leading to changes in chromosome number, horizontal gene transfer, etc. The underlying cause is the accumulation of genetic changes that ultimately promote enough differences so that we judge a population to constitute a unique species. Remember that species are a consequence of adaptation to different ecological niches, and that species of sexually reproducing organisms arise through reproductive isolation. Anagenesis: (ana-up, genesis-origin) a type of pattern of speciation in which a single species is transformed into a different species over many generations. Cladogenesis: (clados-branch, genesis-origin) involves the division of a species into two or more species leading to natural selection acting on each of them independently.

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