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Gene flow (migration)
Has a dizzying array of possible effects
Interacts with both drift and selection
Viability selection
fitness differences due todifferential rates of survival/mortality (surviving to reproductive age)
Fecundity selection
selection on the numberof offspring produced
peacock tail feather
What animal triggered Darwin to think of sexual selection?
Sexual selection
differential reproductive success resulting from
intrasexual
competition for mates among the same sex
intersexual
attraction to the opposite sex (mate choice)
selection sex differences
Males (cheap gametes) compete for access to eggs
Females (expensive gametes) invest heavily in each offspring and be choosy
Mating signals
communicating and choosing correct species identity
Direct benefits for females
benefits that affect a particular female directly (food, nest, protection)
Indirect benefits for females
benefits that affect the genetic quality of a particularfemale's offspring
indicator traits
Assumes that the signals arehonest (signal really means they have good traits—no cheaters!)
Good Genes theories
sexual selection is fundamentally a product of natural selection
Handicap Principle
Ornaments are costly to produce and wear, so they must be indicators of vigor
Runaway Selection
Positive feedback and linkage disequilibrium between ornament and preference = explosive evolutionary "runaway" of both trait and preference
Ex. Females with preference for long tails tend to mate with long-tailed males. Therefore, offspring tend to have the genes for both long tails and the preference for the trait
Lande-Kirkpatrick ("LK") model
mathematical exploration of "Runaway selection"
Darwin's really "Dangerous Idea"
Animal preference may simplybe a preference - rather than aproduct of natural selection toprefer an indicator trait
Evolutionary species concept
a lineage that maintains a unique identity over time (most agreed upon in principal)
Phenetic species (morphospecies) concept
an approach to determining species boundaries in which species are identified as clusters of phenotypically similar individuals or populations
Biological species concept
species are composed of actually or potentially interbreeding individuals that are reproductively isolated
Phylogenetic species concept
species is the smallest diagnosable cluster of individual organisms within which there is a parental pattern of ancestry and descent
Hybrid Zone
Incomplete reproductive isolation can lead to stable ___
Can provide a window into the speciation process
Reproductive isolation
mechanisms that prevent members of different species from producing offspring
Prezygotic isolating mechanisms
isolating mechanisms that:
1) prevent mating or
2) prevent fertilization if mating has occurred
Postzygotic isolating mechanisms
reproductive isolating mechanisms that occur after fertilization
Examples of Prezygotic isolating mechanisms
1) Mate choice
2) Ecological (i.e. different pollinators because of morphology)
3) Mechanical (i.e. incompatible sex organs)
Examples of Postzygotic isolating mechanisms
1) Hybrid inviability (i.e. hybrids have lower fitness than either parental species in a shared environment) extrinsic
2) Hybrid inviability/sterility (often due to structural differences between chromosomes) intrinsic
Dobzhansky-Müller incompatibility
a general framework for understanding hybrid malfitness
Allopatric Speciation
Occurring in geographically isolated areas. Cannot interbreed due to geographic separation. Gene flow cannot occur because of physical separation.
Sympatric speciation
Occurring together in the same area.
Parapatric
Involves a spatial reduction of gene flow, but no geographic boundary. Usually associated with an ecological gradient
Ecomorph
body types/traits correlated with specific habitat utilization
Ecological isolation
divide up a resource or divide up time for reproduction
Reinforcement
selection against hybrids that reduces the frequency of hybrids and can complete speciation
homogenization
Gene flow can lead to _____ across multiple spaces
Founder event or Peripheral Isolate speciation
When a small population becomes isolated and diverges
variation, heritability, natural selection
What is required for evolution by natural selection?
more differentiation in gene flow
The stronger the divergence of selection pressures between locations...
"Mutation-order" speciation
Mutations were selected for within populations, but do not signify adaptive divergence between populations
"sister" species
species and their closest relative
Phylogeography
Studying divergence at the "tips" of the tree of life
FST (fixation index)
proportion of the total genetic variance contained in a subpopulation relative to the total genetic variance. Values can range from 0 to 1. High FST implies a considerable degree of differentiation among populations (isolated groups = 1).
FST of 0
1 Subpopulation contains entire genetic variance of entire population
FST of 1
1 subpopulation is MISSING a lot of overall genetic variance
Hybrid zone studies
Trying to understand the outcomes of secondary contact and the evolution of reproductive isolation
three steps to building a phylogeny
1. Collect character data from each taxon
2. Align those characters into a matrix showing similarity
3. Use some method of inferring relationships from the matrix data
Maximum Parsimony
minimize the number of changes (maximize parsimony) needed to produce the observed tip states
Maximum likelihood
statistical approach used to find the model that maximizes the likelihood of seeing the data
Maximum Likelihood for phylogenetics:
statistical approach used to find the best phylogenetic tree that uses an explicit model of molecular evolution
Bayesian inference
Calculates the probability of the model given the data
Bootstrapping analyses
a statistical technique involving the resampling of data to assess the confidence in a phylogeny
incomplete lineage sorting
when ancestral genetic variation is retained through speciation events
Coalescent theory
developed to study gene-genealogical relationships by tracing the ancestry of gene copies in populations
Coalescence point
the point on a gene tree (the ancestral gene copy) that delineates the most recent common ancestor of the genes being studied in a population
Discordance
when different genes tell distinct stories even though they evolved under a shared history
Biomarkers
molecular evidence of life (e.g., microbial metabolism) in the fossil record
Prebiotic Soup Hypothesis
the idea that the earliest life emerged in a "soup-like" liquid environment, drawing upon energy from cosmic rays, volcanic eruptions, and the Earth's internal heat
Miller-Urey experiment (1952)
Methane, ammonia and hydrogen mixed with boiling water and simulated lightning. Reactions produced over 20 amino acids!
Ribozymes
RNA molecules with enzymatic function (discovered 1980s)
RNA world
a hypothetical period in the evolution of life when RNA served as rudimentary genes and the sole catalytic molecules
Protocell
a cell-like entity that predated cellular life-forms in the history of life
LUCA
Last Universal Common Ancestor (3.5-3.8 billion years ago)
Minimal gene set
hypothetical minimal number of genes
necessary to allow for cellular-based life (about 200)
Horizontal Gene Transfer
Movement of genetic material between individuals (not
parents/offspring) - common in early history of life
Snowball Earth set stage for origin of Eukaryotes
Eukaryotes: cells have a nucleus and other organelles enclosed within membranes (can be uni- or multicellularorganisms)
fungi then amoeba
Who are animals most closely related to?
First eukaryotes
~1.8 billion yearsago• Initial radiation ofanimals: 800million years ago• Initial radiation ofland plants: 500million years ago
Endosymbiosis
a mutually beneficial relationship in which one organism lives within the body, often within the cell, of another (chloroplasts are cyanobacteria)
Slime molds
unicellular protists with facultative sociality (paraphyletic)
Taphonomy
study of the fossilization process
FAD & LAD
First appearance date and last appearance date
Macroevolution
Evolutionary change at or above the species level
Diversification
proliferation of phylogenetic (and ecological) diversity over time
500,000 plants 100,000 fungi
Number of plants vs fungi species
Lichen
a composite organism that arises from algae or cyanobacteria living among filaments of multiple fungi (usually one basidio and one asco!) in a symbiotic relationship
Sepkoski curves
Simple (but data-rich!!) visualizations of biodiversity changes over geologic time
Endemic
species unique to a defined geographic location
Biomes
geographically and climatically defined regions with similar environments
Vicariance
process by which the geographical
range of a population or species is split by the formation of a physical or biotic barrier
Dispersal
process by which a population or species moves individuals or propagules from one area to another
Groups that don't follow latitudinal diversity gradient
salamanders, crayfish, penguins, shorebirds, a few others
Species-Area relationship
Larger (and nearshore) islands have more species
Island biogeography
field within biogeography that examines the factors that affect the species richness of isolated natural communities
Unregulated diversification rate (S-E)
essentially exponential growth
Living Fossils
Single, long branches sister to "more successful" radiations
Imbalance
refers to the distribution of taxa among the different clades of a phylogeny - are they similar or different?
Branching times
the timings of speciation events
sympatric, allopatric
More dead hybrids = higher RI
Thick: _______ species
Thin: _______ species
Key innovation
phenotypic or genotypic trait associated with an increase in diversification (i.e. flowers)
High pollinator specificity
Potential for rapid coevolution of floral traits & pollinators: Rapid speciation
Passive trend
Lower barrier to something like size (evolution won't allow it to go lower)
Active trend
Each lineage tends to increase in body size
Species selection
where only certain species—those possessing a certain trait - survive over long periods of time and therefore
drive evolutionary trend in a trait
anagenetic change
speciation without splitting
Punctuated equilibrium vs phyletic gradualism
abrupt change vs species arise through constant slow change
Stasis
a period of little to no evolutionary change
Preadaption
shift in the function - but not morphology - of a trait during evolution
buccal pumping
Why do non-amniote have large flat heads
Costal Ventilation
Amniotic breathing opens up head shape diversity
Key innovations
Amniote, Costal ventilation, flight, milk (mammary gland)