CHAPTER 2
VARIATION
LEARNING OUTCOMES
• Define variation
• Describe types of variations: Continuous and Discontinuous variations
• Define selection
• Explain two types of selection
• Natural selection
• Artificial selection
• Define the biological species concept
• Define speciation
• State the factors involved in formation of new species.
DEFINITION OF VARIATION
Variation: differences in characteristics among individuals of the same
species
Occur due to:
Differences in genetic constitution
Differences in environmental condition
Interaction between genetic and environmental
TYPES OF VARIATION
CONTINUOUS DISCONTINUOUS
Qualitative
Quantitative
No gradation of character
Shows gradation.
Limited number of distinct forms for a
Example: ?? particular trait.
Can be affected by environmental factors Example: ??
and genetic factors Caused solely by genetic factors.
Graph usually normal/bell-shaped Environmental conditions do not affect
discontinuous variation
No continuous spread of data
TYPES OF VARIATION
DEFINITION OF SELECTION
Selection is a process in which individuals or groups of plants or animals with
desired characteristics are chosen (selected) from a population while the
undesirable ones are eliminated.
Those selected can live longer and reproduce (survival of the fittest).
Two types of selections:
Natural selection: environmental conditions determine which individuals in a population
produce the most offspring
Artificial selection: breeder selects for the desired characteristics
TYPE OF SELECTION: NATURAL SELECTION
A mechanism of evolution in which members of a population that have certain favourable traits
become adapted to the environment and those traits are passed on to the next generation.
Mechanism that causes evaluation
Results from the adaptation of an organism to its environment.
Preserves individuals with favourable phenotypes and eliminates the unfavourable
NATURAL SELECTION: EXAMPLE
NATURAL SELECTION: EXAMPLE
TYPE OF SELECTION: ARTIFICIAL SELECTION
Selection that involves human intervention human intervention (instead of nature) to produced
desired phenotypes/ traits.
Alter the genotype and produce a new strain/ breed of organism for a specific purpose.
Carried out by selective breeding of organism showing desired traits/ characteristics
Natural selection modifies population. Some evolutionary changes are so significant that some
organisms cannot interbreed with the original population
Natural selection can result in organisms that are more likely to survive and reproduce and may
eventually lead to speciation.
Speciation is completed when groups in a species become reproductively isolated and diverge.
When gene pool of a population sufficiently different from the ancestral.
Speciation is the mechanism by which a new species is formed.
BIOLOGICAL SPECIES CONCEPT
Species: a population or group of populations whose members have the potential
to interbreed in nature and produce viable, fertile offspring.
Different species do not interbreed with each other or cannot produce viable,
fertile offspring
Reproductively isolated
DEFINITION AND TYPES OF SPECIATION
Evolutionary process by which new biological species arise from pre-existing species.
Mechanism by which new species are formed.
It is believed that most species arise as a result of populations becoming isolated from
one another
Eventually develop barriers for reproduction and mating between the populations.
Types or modes of speciation
Allopatric speciation
Sympatric speciation
ALLOPATRIC SPECIATION
Also known as geographic speciation
Speciation occurs when biological populations of the same
species become isolated due to geographical changes.
The population must be separated either by distance or an
impassable barrier (physical barrier) preventing allele
exchange.
South rim of North rim of
Grand Canyon Grand Canyon
SYMPATRIC SPECIATION
New species evolve from a single ancestral species, all occupying
the same geographic location (without geographical separation)
Occurs in geographically overlapping populations when biological
factors such as chromosomal changes and non-random mating,
reduce the gene flow
There is something within the environment that keeps a single
species separated into two or more distinct groups
Sympatric speciation is a rare event (common in plants).
Can occur due to:
Habitat differentiation (difference in feeding experiences)
Sexual selection
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION (FORMATION OF NEW SPECIES)
Isolation
Genetic drift
Hybridization
Adaptive radiation
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: ISOLATION
Organisms of the same species are separated
The separated groups are not able to reproduce, so variations and mutations that occur in one
group are not necessarily found in the other group.
The longer the groups are isolated. The more different they are.
Eventually becoming different species causes mating between them to either not happen or to be
unsuccessful.
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: ISOLATION
Isolation
Geographic Reproductive
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION
Biological factors (barriers) that hinder members of two
species from producing viable, fertile offspring
Various reproductive isolating mechanisms prevent
interbreeding between two species whose ranges overlap.
Prezygotic barrier (occurs before mating or fertilization)
Prevent interbreeding
Prevent fertilization
Prevent the formation of zygotes
Postzygotic barrier (occurs after mating or fertilization)
Prevent the proper functioning of zygotes
Hybrid aborts
Hybrid sterility
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – HABITAT ISOLATION
Two species are found in the same area but occupy different habitats
They may utilize different portions of the environment and not hybridize because they do not encounter
each other
E.g. Garter snakes Thamnophis elegans live in water and Thamnophis atratus lives on land/ terrestial
Terrestrial
Aquatic
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – HABITAT ISOLATION
E.g. Tiger (Panthera tigris) lives in the rainforest and lion (Panthera leo) lives on grassland
Rainforest
Grassland/
Savannah
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – TEMPORAL ISOLATION
Species reproduce (mating/ flowering) in different seasons or at different times.
Hybrids between two species can easily made experimentally, but in nature rarely occurs
E.g. Western spotted skunk (Spilogale gracilis) breed during fall and Eastern spotted skunk
(Spilogale putorius) breed in late winter
Fall
Late winter
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – TEMPORAL ISOLATION
E.g. Pinus radiata flowers in February and Pinus attenuata flowers in April
February
April
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – BEHAVIOURAL ISOLATION
Species differ in their mating/ courtship
rituals
Rituals that enable mate recognition
E.g. Blue-footed boobies
Male high steps to draw attention; ‘show off’ his feet to
female.
They also fly over the female’s heads to flash their feet
Sula nebouxii
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – BEHAVIOURAL ISOLATION
E.g. Bowerbird
Sericulus ardens
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – BEHAVIOURAL ISOLATION
E.g. Eastern and Western
Meadowlark bird
Meadowlarks are very similar, yet
they will not interbreed
They use different songs to attract
mates
Eastern Western
(Sturnella magna) (Sturnella neglecta)
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – MECHANICAL ISOLATION
Structural differences in reproductive organs
(genitalia/ flowers) between different species
prevent copulation or pollen transfer
Even in closely related species of plants, the flowers often have
distinct appearances that attract different pollinators
Anatomical incompatibility
E.g. Black sage and white sage plants
Differences in flower structure have different types of pollinating
bees.
Big bees do not fit on the black sage petals
Small bees do not brush up against the stamen of white sage
petals.
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – MECHANICAL ISOLATION
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – MECHANICAL ISOLATION
E.g. Snails
Genital opening that is not
aligned hence, mating cannot be
completed
Bradybaena similaris
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – PREZYGOTIC – GAMETIC ISOLATION
Red
(Strongylocentrotus franciscanus)
Gametes of one species unable to fertilize
with the gametes of another species to
form a zygote
Prevention of gamete fusion
Sperm can only fertilize the correct egg
Usually chemically based (protein receptors on cell
membranes)
E.g. Sea urchins
Two different species of sea urchins have differing
gamete proteins, and their gametes will only fuse with
those the same species. Purple
(Strongylocentrotus purpuratus)
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – POSTZYGOTIC
Prezygotic prevents the formation of hybrid zygotes.
If mating does occur and zygotes are produced, many factors still prevent them from becoming
fertile individuals.
The genetic complement of two species is so different that they cannot function together normally
Embryos may die before reaching maturity.
Even if they can survive the embryo stage, if they are weaker than their parents, they will be
eliminated in nature (hybrid inviability)
If they are strong, they may still be sterile (hybrid infertility)
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – POSTZYGOTIC
Reduced hybrid viability (Hybrid inviability)
Even if they can survive the embryo stage, if
they are weaker than their parents, they will
be eliminated in nature
E.g: Frogs of the genus Rana can form
hybrid tadpoles which die before adulthood
Rana temporaria
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – POSTZYGOTIC
Reduced hybrid fertility (Hybrid sterility)
And if they are strong, they may still be sterile
Fail to produce functional gametes
E.g: Mating between a horse and a donkey
REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION – POSTZYGOTIC
Hybrid breakdown
Hybrid of F1 generation are viable and Hybrid
fertile but F2 generation fails to develop
or infertile.
In other words, the negative effects of
hybridization become more pronounced
in subsequent generations
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION (FORMATION OF NEW SPECIES)
Isolation
Genetic drift
Hybridization
Adaptive radiation
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: GENETIC DRIFT
Gradual changes in allele frequencies of a gene pool from one generation to
another that occur by chance (random events).
Occurs in populations of all sizes but the effects are more significant in small
populations
Two important causes of genetic drift:
Founder effect
Bottlenecks
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: GENETIC DRIFT
Founder effects
Occur when a small population (i.e ‘founders’) is isolated/ migrated from the original larger population
The new population colonized in an unoccupied and isolated area that prevent the gene flow between
the initial and new population
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: GENETIC DRIFT
Bottleneck effects
▪ Sudden changes in the environment such as volcanic eruptions, floods, hurricanes, fire,
earthquakes, overhunting, overharvesting, reduction of food supply and disruption of habitat
▪ The few surviving individuals (the survivors) may constitute a random genetic sample of the
original population hence, the genetic variability is reduced.
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION (FORMATION OF NEW SPECIES)
Isolation
Genetic drift
Hybridization
Adaptive radiation
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: HYBRIDIZATION
Breeding between individuals from different species.
The progenies produced are called hybrids.
In Kingdom Animalia hybrids are usually rare and hardly successful - resulting in
unhealthy and sterile offspring or no offspring at all.
In Kingdom Plantae, hybridization is important.
Hybridization in plants begins with polyploidy
In order to produce a fertile hybrid or new species, hybridization must be followed by
chromosome doubling.
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION (FORMATION OF NEW SPECIES)
Isolation
Genetic drift
Hybridization
Adaptive radiation
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION: ADAPTIVE RADIATION
Dispersion of individuals from one population into several new habitats and
undergo adaptation to live in the new environments.
Over time, an animal or plant population evolves into a wide variety of types
adapted to specialized modes of life.
The individuals of the subpopulations are not able to interbreed to produce fertile
offspring hence, the dispersed group has become a new species.
Darwin’s finches (finches of Galápagos islands)
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION:
ADAPTIVE RADIATION
Darwin’s finches (finches of Galápagos islands)
There are 14 species of finch that evolved from
individuals belonging to one mainland species.
Initially, a few mainland species migrate to one of the
Galápagos islands.
After the original population of a single island
increased, some individuals dispersed to other islands
and adapted to ecological niches.
The islands are ecologically different enough to have
promoted divergent feeding habits.
They evolved in different-sized beaks in relation to the
food sources – and adapted to gathering and eating
different types of food.
FACTORS INVOLVED IN SPECIATION:
ADAPTIVE RADIATION
▪ Ground finches
Feed on seeds- beak is related to the size of the
seeds they eat
Tree finches
Insect-eating, four of them have beaks suitable for
feeding insects, the woodpecker finch has a chisel-
like beak
Warbler finch
Same with warblers on the mainland, has a slender,
warbler-like beak
Vegetarian finch
Bud-eating bird, a very heavy beak used to wrench
buds from branches