Species Basics
Types of Speciation
Isolation Mechanisms
Macroevolution Patterns
Evolution & Extinction
100

This is a group of organisms that can mate and produce fertile offspring.


A species 

100

This type of speciation happens when populations are separated by a physical barrier.


A allopatric speciation

100

This happens when species breed at different times.


A temporal isolation

100

Large evolutionary changes over long periods of time.


A macroevolution

100

When a species completely dies out.


It is called extinction

200

This term describes a small local population that mostly breeds within itself.


A deme

200

This type of speciation happens without physical separation.


A sympatric speciation

200

This happens when mating behaviors are different.


A behavioral isolation

200

Evolution happening slowly and steadily over time.


It is gradualism

200

Slow, natural extinction over time.


It is called background extinction

300

This is when traits change gradually across different geographic areas.


A cline

300

This type of speciation can happen very quickly, often in plants.


A instantaneous speciation

300

This happens when sperm and egg cannot join.


A gamete incompatibility

300

Evolution happening in quick bursts with long periods of little change.


A punctuated equilibrium

300

A major event where many species go extinct quickly.


It is called mass extinction

400

This keeps species separate by preventing interbreeding and keeping gene pools different.


A reproductive barriers (or isolation mechanisms)

400

What stops gene flow in allopatric speciation


A geographic isolation (like mountains, rivers, etc.)

400

This happens when offspring cannot reproduce.

A hybrid sterility

400

When one species splits into many different species to fill different roles.


It is a adaptive radiation

400

When unrelated species develop similar traits due to similar environments.


It is called convergent evolution

500

Why might the definition of species not work well for bacteria? (Critical thinking)


Because bacteria reproduce asexually and don’t need to interbreed.


500

(Outside Info)

Example:  Apple maggot flies split into two groups based on different fruits without separation. What type of speciation is this

A sympatric speciation

500

 (Outside Info)

Example: A liger (lion + tiger) is often large but has health problems. What type of isolation is this?

A hybrid disadvantage

500

(Outside Info)

Example: Darwin’s finches evolving different beaks on islands is an example of what?

It is a adaptive radiation (or divergent evolution)

500

When two species influence each other’s evolution (like predator and prey).


It is called coevolution