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  • 00:00


  • 00:07

    Hi. It's Mr. Andersen. And welcome to the Unit 2 review. In this podcast I'm going to

  • 00:08

    talk about speciation. We're going to talk about speciation, extinction, mechanisms of

  • 00:14

    speciation. But before we get started we should define what speciation is. Speciation is essentially

  • 00:20

    a biological process by which new species arrive. And so all life on our planet started

  • 00:29

    with what we call the last universal common ancestor. All other species that we have on

  • 00:35

    our planet then arose through speciation. So the formation of new species. And so let's

  • 00:42

    start by talking about what phylogenetics are. Phylogenetics are basically the evolutionary

  • 00:47

    history of species and organisms on our planet. So this right here would be an example of

  • 00:53

    a, let me get a different color, a phylogenetic tree. And so basically time is going to go

  • 00:59

    in this direction on a phylogenetic tree. And so it's going to start with an ancestor

  • 01:05

    of all the different organisms on this tree. This one happens to be about whales. But every

  • 01:10

    time we see a branch point like that or if we have branch point up here, then we eventually

  • 01:15

    have two new species. So this would be a speciation event. Each of these junctions then on a phylogenetic

  • 01:24

    tree is simply going to be a common ancestor. And so what is this point here actually mean?

  • 01:30

    It simply means there was a common ancestor between the southern minke and northern minke

  • 01:35

    whale at sometime in the history. Now I don't want you to memorize a lot of phylogenetic

  • 01:40

    trees, except this one over here. This is the phylogenetic tree of all life on our planet.

  • 01:46

    And so basically we have the three domains of life. And those are bacteria, archaea and

  • 01:50

    then eukaryotes. And so if we were to look at this tree what we find is that there's

  • 01:55

    a really early branch point. In other words a branch point between the bacteria on one

  • 02:00

    side. And then the archaea and eukarya on the other side. What does that mean? Well

  • 02:06

    you're more related to an archaea then to a bacteria. And so we had a branch point here.

  • 02:13

    And then we had another branch point, this one broke down into the archaea and then into

  • 02:17

    the eukarya over here. And so basically this is the phylogenetic tree of all life on our

  • 02:22

    planet. We've never found life on our planet that doesn't fit into one of these three domains.

  • 02:28

    And so basically looking at this tree we can say this point right here is the point at

  • 02:33

    which that last universal common ancestor existed. Now could have there have been earlier

  • 02:39

    life before this branch point? For sure. It just didn't leave any kind of a fossil record

  • 02:44

    or it didn't leave any ancestors. And so that last universal common ancestor will come back

  • 02:49

    to later in the podcast. So let's talk about speciation, specifically in relation to extinction.

  • 02:56

    And so speciation again we say is the formation of new species. Extinction is going to be

  • 03:02

    the opposite of that. In other words when species when species leave. In other words

  • 03:07

    if we're looking at time in this direction, so this is a specific type of a saurapod,

  • 03:11

    a type of dinosaur. Basically this would be ancient past and this is time moving in this

  • 03:16

    direction. So every time we see a branch point like that, that's a speciation event. Every

  • 03:22

    time it comes to an end, so right here it comes to an end, that would be extinction.

  • 03:27

    And so all of the organisms we have on our planet today either form through speciation

  • 03:33

    or will disappear through extinction. Two big things that I want to talk about in relation

  • 03:38

    to speciation and extinction are number one, mass extinctions. Mass extinctions are going

  • 03:45

    to be extinctions where it's not just one species getting wiped out but a number of

  • 03:50

    species getting wiped out at the same time. So the extinction of the dinosaur is an example

  • 03:54

    of a mass extinction. And we're pretty sure that that was caused by an asteroid impact

  • 03:59

    just off the Yucatan peninsula, in the Gulf of Mexico. And so we had this massive extinction

  • 04:05

    of a number of species at that time. Now was it the asteroid impact or climatic changes

  • 04:09

    after that? We'll probably figure that out. But that's a mass extinction. We've had like

  • 04:13

    five mass extinctions. And you're lucky enough to be right in the middle of probably the

  • 04:17

    biggest mass extinction of all. Humans are making climate changes that species simply

  • 04:22

    can't adapt quickly enough to. Okay. So I said there are two things I wanted to talk

  • 04:26

    about. One is mass extinctions. The second is something called adaptive radiation. So

  • 04:35

    adaptive radiation is when we have just one species that branches into a number of species

  • 04:41

    very very quickly. And so example. Let me give you a couple of examples. When Pangaea

  • 04:46

    formed and all the continents came together we had a giant desert in the middle of the

  • 04:50

    super continent. And it was bad for life. So we had a mass extinction. As the continents

  • 04:55

    started to break apart then we had all of these little niches between the continents.

  • 04:59

    And so we had adaptive radiation of dinosaurs. The dinosaurs did really well and filled all

  • 05:04

    of those niches. Okay. That was followed by a mass extinction of this asteroid impact.

  • 05:09

    Which in turn was followed by adaptive radiation of mammals filling those niches that were

  • 05:13

    once filled by dinosaurs. And so adaptive radiations can be large scale. For example

  • 05:18

    the exploitation of mammals of these new niches that were vacated by dinosaurs. Or it could

  • 05:22

    be even at the local level. So those first finches that landed on the Galapagos Islands

  • 05:27

    adaptively radiated to fill all of those niches on the islands. Next thing is the artificial

  • 05:33

    selection lab. We haven't done this yet. But in the artificial selection lab what we'll

  • 05:37

    do is we'll use these Wisconsin fast plants. And we're basically going to choose traits

  • 05:42

    that we want in the offspring. And then we're going to set those crosses up. And so we'll

  • 05:46

    use a bee stick where you take a bee and you put it on a stick. It's a dead bee, but you

  • 05:50

    can transfer pollen from one plant to another. You then get seeds and you can choose the

  • 05:55

    characteristics that you want. So is this artificial selection? Yeah. Because we're

  • 05:59

    making the choices. Not natural selection. Now all of these creatures were made, at least

  • 06:05

    their characteristics were made through artificial selection as well. So dogs are wolves if you

  • 06:09

    look at the DNA of dogs and wolves its essentially the same thing. But humans have selected for

  • 06:14

    traits that they wanted over time. And through that we've been able to create species. If

  • 06:20

    you were to show somebody, they didn't know about dogs, a chihuahua and a great dane,

  • 06:24

    and say these are of the same species, they would say you're nuts. And that's because

  • 06:28

    we've changed them so much. Bent them a little bit to our will. What are some mechanisms

  • 06:33

    by which speciation can occur? Well if we're talking geographically, let me give you an

  • 06:38

    example of that. And so let me try and draw the United States. This is really bad. There

  • 06:45

    we go. So there's a species of meadowlark that lived right across here in North America.

  • 06:53

    So it lived in these mid kind of latitudes. During the last ice age we had a, let's get

  • 06:59

    a different color, so we had the ice sheet move down right down like this and fill up

  • 07:05

    that center part of North America. So now what we had was meadowlarks that were over

  • 07:11

    here. We had meadowlarks that were over here. And those were isolated geographically. Now

  • 07:17

    there are two types of geographic isolation. One is allopatric. At least our book talks

  • 07:22

    about. Allopatric is when those different populations are separated geographically in

  • 07:27

    different lands. Sympatric I'll get to in just a second. Okay. So we had our meadowlarks

  • 07:32

    that were separated by this ice sheet. Now the ice you know eventually melted and retreated.

  • 07:37

    And after it had done that then we had these two populations, the western and the eastern

  • 07:42

    meadowlark. Now during this period of time they developed different songs. So they had

  • 07:45

    different behavior. And so even though in this margin we'll probably have eastern and

  • 07:50

    western meadowlarks in the same area at the same time, since the males impress females

  • 07:54

    with their songs, they can't communicate anymore. And so this would be how species are formed.

  • 08:00

    I'd said that sympatric speciation is different. Allopatric speciation is when you're in different

  • 08:05

    lands. Sympatric speciation is when you're in the same land. And so that's when we have

  • 08:09

    a population. And then we get a new population within that population. That generally occurs

  • 08:15

    in plants. And it generally occurs using polyploidy where we have a mistake. Where an increase

  • 08:20

    in the number of chromosomes creates a brand new species. And so that would be a genetic

  • 08:25

    polymorphism. So when we have a change in the chromosome number and it creates something

  • 08:29

    brand new. It happens a lot in plants. Rarely in animals. Now the two things I haven't mentioned

  • 08:34

    are peripatric and parapatric. And I say those exactly the same way. That's when organisms

  • 08:39

    move into a niche, nearby niche that maybe isolated or it maybe even attached. But now

  • 08:45

    they start adapting to their local environment. And so the forest elephants of Africa moved

  • 08:50

    into the forest. Moved into the niche. And so they're getting a different appearance

  • 08:53

    and eventually will create a brand new species. Okay. So those are geographic. Four types

  • 08:58

    of geographic isolation. Behavior isolation, I kind of mentioned is when you're behavior

  • 09:03

    keeps species from breeding. Temporal isolation is, I always remember the T stands for time.

  • 09:10

    That's when they mate is going to create new species. In other words if this frog breeds

  • 09:15

    in the spring and this one in the fall, even though the could form hybrids, they're not

  • 09:19

    going to. And then mechanical isolation could be mechanical isolation of the anatomy. For

  • 09:25

    example these snails. Some of them are turned clockwise and some are counter-clockwise.

  • 09:29

    So their sex parts can't quite get together. But mechanical isolation could be isolation

  • 09:34

    of, you know, even the egg and the sperm can't get together. And so that would be another

  • 09:38

    thing that can create brand new species. Okay. If we talk about natural selection within

  • 09:44

    species, now we're starting to talk about changes in a bell shaped curve. And so in

  • 09:49

    anything, pretty much every trait that we have, unless it's caused by one or even a

  • 09:54

    couple of genes, it's going to give you a phenotype that is a bell shape curve. So this

  • 09:58

    could be skin color in humans. It could be height in humans. It could be length of thumb

  • 10:03

    in humans. But we're essentially made up of a bunch of these bell shaped curves. And so

  • 10:08

    if you ever have selection on one side of that, you can push a bell shaped curve in

  • 10:12

    one direction or the other. We can squeeze a bell shaped curve. We can make it tighter

  • 10:17

    on the sides. And basically there's three things that we can do to a bell shaped curve.

  • 10:21

    First one of these is called directional selection. That's where we're actually moving it in one

  • 10:25

    direction. The quintessential example of this is the Galapagos finches that the Grants were

  • 10:30

    studying on Daphne Major. So basically they measured all of the beaks of the birds on

  • 10:35

    Daphne Major. They collected all of the birds that they could possible catch. They found

  • 10:39

    751 birds. And this is the average beak depth. Okay. Now they had a massive drought. So they

  • 10:46

    had a bird apocalypse. And so they came back in 1978. There were 90 birds that survived.

  • 10:51

    So almost all of them had died. But the bell shaped curve you can see had switched over

  • 10:56

    here to the bigger side. And the reason why is the beaks were now able to open seeds that

  • 11:01

    they couldn't open before. What happened to the birds that weren't able to open up those

  • 11:05

    seeds? They died. So they died and that's why we see the bell shaped curve moving in

  • 11:10

    this direction. And so remember in natural selection it's not like organisms are changing

  • 11:14

    the way they are. They can't do that. They're either dying or surviving based on the characteristics

  • 11:19

    they have. And so the population can change. Or the population can evolve over time. Disruptive

  • 11:25

    selection is when we have, oops, is when we have either pressure pushing them apart. Or

  • 11:33

    it could be drawing them to the sides. So we have a pressure here that is removing individuals

  • 11:39

    that are in the middle. And so an example of that could also be found in the Galapagos

  • 11:43

    finches. And so why do we have so many different types of beaks in the Galapagos finches? Well

  • 11:49

    each of those birds are modified so they can feed on a specific seed. And so once those

  • 11:53

    first finches got to the Galapagos, they landed and flew to different islands. And they were

  • 11:57

    able to adapt to that specific climate. And then finally we can have stabilizing selection.

  • 12:03

    An example of stabilizing selection is when we squeeze the bell shaped curve together.

  • 12:07

    An example I always give is babies. If a baby weighs one pound it would never be able to

  • 12:12

    survive. If it weighed 21 pounds it would not survive and it would take mom with it.

  • 12:17

    And so basically babies weigh about 7 pounds. Because there's pressure on either side. Eliminating

  • 12:23

    babies at the extreme. A specific type of natural selection that puzzled scientists

  • 12:27

    for a long time is in the amazing shows of like the peacock or the songs of birds or

  • 12:35

    the colors or the butterfly or the huge antlers in an elk. Basically what's going on here

  • 12:41

    is sexual selection. So it's not nature making a choice as to who survives. It's females

  • 12:47

    making a choice as to males. So essentially she's checking out this peacock. She's looking

  • 12:53

    at his feathers. And she's making a judgement call. If he isn't able to produce feathers,

  • 12:58

    isn't able to produce the correct number of eye spots, he probably can't produce fertile

  • 13:01

    offspring as well. And so whenever females make a choice that's when we get this weird

  • 13:06

    dimorphism, this change between males and females. Kind of finishing up in the beginning.

  • 13:11

    So basically how did life on our planet, before all of this speciation take place, how did

  • 13:16

    it form? Well a lot of scientists are thinking that it is through abiogenesis. In other words

  • 13:22

    it came from non-living material. Now we know that life just doesn't spring from nothing.

  • 13:28

    Especially today when oxygen is present and it's going to break down chemicals quickly.

  • 13:32

    But the famous Miller-Urey experiment, what they did is they basically created the early

  • 13:37

    earth's atmosphere. They got rid of oxygen. Included water, methane, ammonia. And they

  • 13:43

    added a shock to kind of simulate lightning. And what they were able to do is produce the

  • 13:48

    building blocks of life. Amino acids, nucleotides. And so they were able to make the genes that

  • 13:54

    would be found in this last universal common ancestor. Today we see an area where that

  • 14:00

    might be in the stromatolites that we find in this area kind of in this tide pool kind

  • 14:04

    of an area. It's similar to some of the first fossils that we found on our planet. But maybe

  • 14:09

    life was delivered here in a meteorite from Mars or from a different planet. We don't

  • 14:13

    know. And we'll probably never know what that first ancestor looked like, that first cell.

  • 14:18

    But we have a not of theories that kind of point us in the right direction. So I want

  • 14:22

    to finish with kind of a walk through time as far as life goes. I don't expect you to

  • 14:26

    memorize all the different periods of time. But I do want you to know the progression.

  • 14:31

    And so if we look back the earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago. For most of that first

  • 14:37

    part it was just a ball of magma. And so it was just a molten ball of magma. So life couldn't

  • 14:42

    have existed on it at all anyway. But basically around 4 billion years the first life on our

  • 14:48

    planet formed. And that was prokaryotic life. And so that was, let me get a different color,

  • 14:54

    so basically the first life on our planet was that. It had genetic material on the inside.

  • 15:00

    Probably similar to a bacteria. But it was a simple cell. So this is the first life we

  • 15:04

    have on our planet. If we play the clock forward, photosynthesis start here. We start to get

  • 15:09

    an appreciable oxygen in the atmosphere which actually adds pressure to species that aren't

  • 15:15

    designed to work well with oxygen. And so our next big thing that happens, so here is

  • 15:20

    prokaryotic life. Next thing we have is eukaryotic life. So eukaryotes show you know like 2 billion

  • 15:28

    years ago. Now eukaryotic cells are going to be different than prokaryotic in two ways.

  • 15:32

    Number one they have a nucleus. And they've got the genetic material inside there. But

  • 15:37

    they also have all of the other parts of a cell. So they have like golgi apparatus. They

  • 15:41

    have endoplasmic reticulum. They have mitochondria. They have lysosomes. And so they have all

  • 15:47

    these organelles that are separated by membranes. Now how did we go from prokaryotic cells to

  • 15:52

    eukaryotic cells? Well two ways. Number the membrane started to fold in on itself. And

  • 15:57

    so we got what's called an endomembrane system. That's how you get an golgi apparatus. That's

  • 16:02

    how you get lysosomes. But we also had mitochondria. So mitochondria were probably bacteria that

  • 16:07

    moved into cells. Chloroplasts the same way. So now we had eukaryotic cells. If we play

  • 16:12

    the clock forward, we eventually get to multicellular life. And then it's awhile before we get to

  • 16:17

    animals, plants, mammals. And then humans show way up in the end. So multicellularity

  • 16:22

    comes when we have cells working together for a common purpose. Why is it that we don't

  • 16:27

    see animals and plants moving onto land until much later? It's because the atmosphere was

  • 16:33

    not really formed yet. Until we had an ozone, until we had a defensive atmosphere, life

  • 16:37

    had to exist in the oceans where it was protected from that. And so you stand at kind of a unique

  • 16:42

    time. It's not been long that humans have been around. But we have had some huge impacts

  • 16:50

    on our climate that are probably going to impact species and lead to that maybe sixth

  • 16:54

    mass extinction. And so that's speciation in a condensed form. And I hope that's helpful.

All

The example sentences of SPECIATION in videos (1 in total of 2)

and coordinating conjunction so preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner organisms noun, plural we personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present on preposition or subordinating conjunction our possessive pronoun planet noun, singular or mass today noun, singular or mass either determiner form noun, singular or mass through preposition or subordinating conjunction speciation noun, singular or mass

Use "speciation" in a sentence | "speciation" example sentences

How to use "speciation" in a sentence?

  • Ordinary speciation remains fully adequate to explain the causes and phenomenology of punctuation.
    -Stephen Jay Gould-
  • On Earth, among millions of lineages or organisms and perhaps 50 billion speciation events, only one led to high intelligence ; this makes me believe its utter improbablity.
    -Ernst Mayr-

Definition and meaning of SPECIATION

What does "speciation mean?"

/ˌspēSHēˈāSHən/

noun
formation of new and distinct species in course of evolution.