BIOL 2002 Chapter Notes - Chapter 25: Punctuated Equilibrium, Pattern Formation, Master Control

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10 Apr 2017
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Speciation is the formation of a new species. Caused by genetic changes in a particular group that make it different from the derived one. Accumulation of genetic changes that promote enough differences. May occur due to abrupt events like change in chromosome number that causes reproductive isolation. Species arise because of adaptations to different niches. Cladogenesis - splitting or diverging of 1 species into 2 or more species. Require gene flow becoming interrupted between populations. Allopatric species - more prevalent way for cladogenesis to occur. Populations become isolated and evolve into 1 or more. Can happen with a founding population in a new place and natural selection rapidly altering genetic composition of population. Adaptive radiation - single ancestral species has evolved into a wide array of descendant species that differ in habitat, form, behavior. Hybrid zones = where 2 populations can interbreed. Gene flow needs to be low for populations to be reproductively isolated.

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