Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Speciation 10-130509060643-phpapp02
1. SPECIATION
A species is a population of
organisms consisting of similar
individuals which can breed
together and produce fertile
offspring.
The process by which new species
develop from the existing species is
known as speciation.
2. FACTORS
Geographical isolation of a population caused by
various types of barriers. The geographical
isolation leads to reproductive isolation due to
which there is no flow of genes between
separated groups of population.
Genetic drift caused by drastic changes in the
frequencies of particular genes by chance alone.
Variations caused in individuals due to natural
selection.
3. GENETIC DRIFT
Genetic drift or allelic drift is the change in
the frequency of a gene variant (allele) in a
population due to random sampling. The alleles
in the offspring are a sample of those in the
parents, and chance has a role in determining
whether a given individual survives and
reproduces. Genetic drift may cause gene
variants to disappear completely and thereby
reduce genetic variation.
5. EVOLUTION OF FEATHERS
Pterosaurs were flying reptiles
The presence of feathers on birds tells us that
birds are very closely related to reptiles.
9. EVOLUTION SHOULD NOT BE EQUATED
WITH PROGRESS
EVOLUTION IS JUST THE PRODUCTION
OF DIVERSITY OF LIFE FORMS AND
SHAPING OF THIS DIVERSITY BY THE
ENVIRONMENTAL SELECTION. THE
ONLY PROGRESS IN EVOLUTION
APPEARS TO BE THAT MORE AND MORE
COMPLEX BODY DESIGNS OF
ORGANISMS HAVE EMERGED OVER THE
AGES.