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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- The evolution of color vision
- Müllerian mimicry
- Passionflower vines
- Most Heliconius butterflies mimic other Heliconius species
- Outline
- Darwin on species
- Darwin’s Tree of Life
- Biological species concept
- What is a species?
- Speciation
- Reproductive isolation
- Reproductive isolation mechanisms
- Prezygotic mechanisms
- Prezygotic barriers to gene flow
- Reinforcement
- Hybridization
- Hybridization: ducks
- Postzygotic mechanisms (1)
- Postzygotic barriers to gene flow
- Postzygotic mechanisms (2)
- What evidence is there that natural selection acts against novel color patterns?
- Color artificial models
- Field studies
- Attacks by birds
- Mate choice experiments
- Approaches by butterflies
- Significance
- Evidence for selection against hybrids?
- Mark-move-recapture across a hybrid zone
- What are the consequences of hybridization?
- Introgression
- Are wing color patterns the result of adaptive introgression?
- Heliconius wings are geographically variable between species
- Reference genome sequencing and assembly
- Mapping re-sequenced genomes against a reference
- The red locus
- Distinguishing between introgression and shared variation
- Gene trees and discordance with species trees
- Phylogenies of the B/D color-pattern region
- Discordant intraspecific phylogenies at the optix locus
- Origins and introgression of the red locus
- Co-mimics
- Red locus enhancers
- Are there other consequences of hybridization?
- Hybrid speciation (1)
- How might hybrid speciation occur?
- Hybrid speciation (2)
- Potential outcomes of hybridization
- Conclusions and summary
Topics Covered
- The species concepts
- Speciation
- Mechanisms of reproductive isolation
- Mechanisms of reproductive isolation
- Prezygotic and postzygotic mechanisms
- Hybridization
- Introgression
- Genomics of Speciation
- Hybrid speciation
Links
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Talk Citation
Briscoe, A.D. (2021, March 30). Evolutionary case study: the genomics of speciation in Heliconius butterflies [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 3, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/UGAF7078.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Adriana D. Briscoe has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Evolutionary case study: the genomics of speciation in Heliconius butterflies
Published on March 30, 2021
30 min
Other Talks in the Series: Introduction to Evolutionary Biology
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
My name is Adriana Briscoe,
and I'm a professor in
the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
at the University of California, Irvine.
I'm going to be talking to you today about an evolutionary case-study:
the genomics of speciation in Heliconius butterflies.
0:18
Before I do that, I'm going to say a word about the work we study in my lab.
We're interested in the evolution of color vision and coloration in butterflies.
You're going to hear a lot more about coloration in butterflies, as
this topic has proven to be a model system for studies of speciation.
Before we get to that, here are images of butterfly eyeshine
which illustrate the diverse coloration in living butterfly eyes.
It's worth noting that coloration on butterfly wings evolved as the result of
both natural and sexual selection, mediated by
both visual predators (such as birds) and by the butterflies themselves.
1:01
Heliconius butterflies illustrate both of these principles.
These butterflies are found in the tropics, and they played an important role
in supporting Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection.
Specifically, natural historians like Fritz Müller
(who collected and described butterflies in Brazil in the 1800s)
recognized that the bright coloration of the wings of Heliconius butterflies
functioned as a signal to birds that these butterflies are unpalatable.
As a consequence of birds learning to associate these color patterns with a bad taste,
unrelated species of butterflies living in
the same geographical locality evolved similar wing patterns.
This kind of mimicry is known today as 'Müllerian mimicry'.
An important aspect of Heliconius biology is that different species of
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