All Study Guides World Biogeography Unit 5
🌾 World Biogeography Unit 5 – Speciation and Extinction in BiogeographySpeciation and extinction shape Earth's biodiversity. These processes drive the evolution of new species and the loss of existing ones. Understanding their mechanisms is crucial for grasping how life on our planet has changed over time.
From allopatric speciation to mass extinctions, various factors influence these processes. Geographic isolation, ecological opportunity, and human activities all play roles in shaping the diversity and distribution of species across the globe.
Key Concepts and Definitions
Speciation: The evolutionary process by which new species arise from existing species over time
Extinction: The permanent loss of a species from Earth, occurs when the last individual of a species dies
Allopatric speciation: Speciation that occurs when populations become geographically isolated from one another
Sympatric speciation: Speciation that occurs within the same geographic area without physical barriers
Reproductive isolation: The inability of two populations to interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring
Gene flow: The transfer of genetic material from one population to another through interbreeding
Genetic drift: Random changes in allele frequencies within a population, particularly in small populations
Natural selection: The process by which organisms with favorable traits survive and reproduce more successfully than those without these traits
Mechanisms of Speciation
Prezygotic barriers prevent mating or fertilization between populations, leading to reproductive isolation
Habitat isolation: Populations occupy different habitats and do not encounter each other (montane vs. lowland species)
Temporal isolation: Populations have different mating seasons or times (diurnal vs. nocturnal species)
Behavioral isolation: Populations have different courtship behaviors or mating rituals (bird songs, dance patterns)
Postzygotic barriers reduce the fitness or viability of hybrid offspring, reinforcing reproductive isolation
Hybrid inviability: Hybrid offspring do not survive to reproductive age due to genetic incompatibilities (mule)
Hybrid sterility: Hybrid offspring are viable but unable to produce functional gametes (ligers, tigons)
Ecological speciation occurs when populations adapt to different environmental conditions, leading to divergence
Polyploidy, the duplication of entire sets of chromosomes, can instantly create reproductive barriers (many plant species)
Types of Speciation
Allopatric speciation: Populations become geographically isolated, allowing them to diverge independently
Vicariance: A population is split by the formation of a physical barrier (continental drift, mountain formation)
Peripatric speciation: A small subpopulation becomes isolated at the periphery of the parent species' range
Sympatric speciation: Populations diverge within the same geographic area without physical barriers
Disruptive selection: Extreme phenotypes are favored over intermediate ones, leading to divergence (cichlid fish in African lakes)
Polyploidy: Instant reproductive isolation through chromosome duplication (many plant species)
Parapatric speciation: Populations have partially overlapping ranges with limited gene flow
Allochronic speciation: Populations diverge due to differences in breeding times or seasons (periodical cicadas)
Factors Influencing Speciation
Geographic isolation reduces gene flow between populations, allowing them to accumulate genetic differences
Ecological opportunity, such as the colonization of new habitats or the extinction of competitors, can drive adaptive radiation
Sexual selection, through mate choice or intrasexual competition, can lead to rapid divergence in reproductive traits
Hybridization between closely related species can sometimes result in the formation of new hybrid species
Coevolution between species (predator-prey, host-parasite) can drive reciprocal adaptations and speciation
Founder effects and genetic bottlenecks in small populations can accelerate divergence through genetic drift
Extinction Processes
Background extinction: The gradual, continuous loss of species over geological time due to various factors
Mass extinction: Rapid, widespread loss of species in a relatively short period (end-Permian, end-Cretaceous)
The "Big Five" mass extinctions in Earth's history caused by various factors (volcanism, climate change, impacts)
Pseudoextinction: Lineage extinction through anagenesis (gradual evolution) or cladogenesis (splitting into daughter species)
Local extinction (extirpation): The disappearance of a species from a particular area, while persisting elsewhere
Lazarus taxa: Species that disappear from the fossil record, only to reappear later (coelacanth, dawn redwood)
Living fossils: Species that have remained relatively unchanged over long periods of geological time (horseshoe crabs, ginkgo)
Causes of Extinction
Habitat loss and fragmentation due to human activities (deforestation, urbanization, agriculture)
Overexploitation of species for food, medicine, or other resources (passenger pigeon, great auk)
Invasive species that outcompete or prey upon native species (brown tree snake on Guam, Nile perch in Lake Victoria)
Climate change, both natural and anthropogenic, can alter habitats and disrupt species' ecological niches
Pollution and environmental toxins can reduce fertility, survival, and overall fitness of species
Disease outbreaks, particularly in small or vulnerable populations (chytrid fungus in amphibians, white-nose syndrome in bats)
Trophic cascades: The loss of keystone species can have ripple effects throughout the ecosystem (sea otters, wolves in Yellowstone)
Biogeographical Patterns
Latitudinal diversity gradient: Species richness generally increases from poles to equator
Rapoport's rule: Species ranges tend to be smaller at lower latitudes and larger at higher latitudes
Elevational diversity gradient: Species richness often peaks at intermediate elevations in mountainous regions
Island biogeography: The number of species on an island is determined by its size and isolation
Equilibrium theory of island biogeography: Balances immigration and extinction rates (MacArthur & Wilson)
Endemism: Species that are unique to a particular geographic area (islands, isolated habitats)
Disjunct distributions: Species or higher taxa that occur in widely separated areas (Gondwanan distribution)
Bergmann's rule: Within a species or genus, larger-bodied individuals are found in colder environments
Case Studies and Examples
Darwin's finches: Adaptive radiation of finches in the Galápagos Islands, showcasing speciation through natural selection
Hawaiian honeycreepers: Diverse assemblage of birds that evolved from a single ancestral species
African Rift Valley lakes: Rapid speciation of cichlid fish driven by ecological opportunity and sexual selection
Caribbean Anolis lizards: Convergent evolution of ecomorphs on different islands
Peppered moth: Industrial melanism as an example of natural selection and rapid evolutionary change
Passenger pigeon: Once the most abundant bird in North America, driven to extinction by overhunting and habitat loss
Thylacine (Tasmanian tiger): Marsupial carnivore that went extinct in the 20th century due to hunting and competition with introduced species
Dodo: Flightless bird endemic to Mauritius, driven to extinction by human exploitation and introduced predators