Speciation (AQA GCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Written by: Lára Marie McIvor
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
Darwin & Wallace
Alfred Russel Wallace was a scientist who, after conducting his own travels around the world and gathering much evidence, independently developed his own theory of evolution based on the process of natural selection
He published scientific papers on this theory with Darwin in 1858 (Darwin published his book, On the Origin of Species, the following year
Wallace is best known for:
His work studying the warning colouration of species (particularly butterflies) and how this must be an example of a beneficial characteristic that had evolved by natural selection, as the warning colouration helps to deter predators
Developing the theory of speciation
Speciation
Alfred Wallace did much pioneering work on speciation but more evidence over time has led to our current understanding of the theory of speciation
Speciation is a process that results in the formation of a new species
When populations of the same species become so different that they are unable to interbreed and produce fertile offspring, they are considered different species and speciation has occurred
Speciation can occur as a result of a combination of isolation (when populations of the same species become separated) and natural selection:
Populations of the same species can become isolated from one another due to the formation of a physical barrier (eg. a new river or mountain range) – this is known as geographic isolation
The environment will be different on either side of this physical barrier (eg. different climates or different food available)
The environmental differences on either side will provide different selection pressures and natural selection will cause a different set of characteristics to become more common in the two isolated populations
Over many generations, individuals from the two populations will have become so distinct (genetically, behaviorally, physically) that they will no longer be able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring
The two populations are now separate species
The process of speciation
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