Speciation: An Illustrated Introduction

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2013
  • Explore more at www.birdsofparadiseproject.org.
    There is a dizzying diversity of species on our planet. From genetic evidence we know that all of those species evolved from a single ancient ancestor. But how does one species split in to many? Through the evolutionary process of speciation - which begins when populations become isolated by changes in geography or by shifts in behavior so that they no longer interbreed. This video illustrates the speciation process in birds to help you understand the basis of earth's biodiversity.
    Including photographs and video by Tim Laman

Komentáře • 250

  • @pmmeyourdadjokes9811
    @pmmeyourdadjokes9811 Před 4 lety +116

    Gotta love that sensual music setting the mood when you were talking about reproductive isolation

  • @scarlettaco9430
    @scarlettaco9430 Před 9 lety +404

    Man, I just came here because of my science teacher.

    • @slumpybtw2083
      @slumpybtw2083 Před 7 lety +1

      man that sucks

    • @user-vf8ot4ni6d
      @user-vf8ot4ni6d Před 7 lety

      XpQ TУT МOЖНО НAКРУТИТЬ ЛAЙКИ, ПОДПИСЧИKOB PАСKPУТКА ГPYПП. ПЕРEХOДИTЕ В ПPOФИЛЬ, ТАМ СCЫЛКA НА САЙT

    • @jimkeller3868
      @jimkeller3868 Před 6 lety +2

      So?

    • @thickmuffins6155
      @thickmuffins6155 Před 6 lety

      Scarlet Taco same

    • @ThomasNeal
      @ThomasNeal Před 6 lety

      Same, you must be a junior now...

  • @user-vl7kp4xx2d
    @user-vl7kp4xx2d Před 19 dny +1

    Those fascinating animation help me a lot to understand well about speciation.

  • @xXAISPXx
    @xXAISPXx Před 11 lety +12

    This is the best explanation of speciation I have seen.

  • @silliaek
    @silliaek Před 3 lety +13

    This cleared up a lot of questions I had about speciation. Good video.

  • @aquasparx4015
    @aquasparx4015 Před 4 lety +32

    Just started working on this for homework now!

  • @VeggieNatureGirl
    @VeggieNatureGirl Před 10 lety +84

    I always found speciation a bit confusing. This video does such a great job discussing and illustrating the topic. Great job as always Cornell :)

    • @loricalass4068
      @loricalass4068 Před 7 lety +1

      Speciation shows the exact opposite of evolution and evolutionism is pure pseudo science. You might want to check out some of my other posts to see why that is easily verified by scientific data.

    • @jimkeller3868
      @jimkeller3868 Před 6 lety +1

      You found it confusing because hardly anyone explains it well, unfortunately.
      This video does a good job.

    • @ChrisPBacon-lu6wd
      @ChrisPBacon-lu6wd Před 3 lety

      @@loricalass4068 bruh

    • @loricalass4068
      @loricalass4068 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ChrisPBacon-lu6wd :-) Thanks but I am female. I have prayed for you and yours in these last days.

    • @junodonatus4906
      @junodonatus4906 Před 3 lety

      @@loricalass4068
      The denial of evolution is denomination specific and derives from a literal reading of the book of Genesis. Meanwhile, it was never meant to be read literally. It is written in the style of allegory. Any expert will tell you that. Therefore, your denial of evolution is not only built on a misreading of the Bible but is disingenuous as it stems from your religious beliefs.

  • @squeaky1871
    @squeaky1871 Před 3 lety +9

    Quick video hack to make the video go by 'faster.' Put the playback speed at 2, or any other that you like, and open the transcript (use the three dots near the thumbs up buttons). Then read along with the video, or just listen. Reading helps you take in the information better.

  • @Crystallinesonic
    @Crystallinesonic Před 8 lety +15

    So clear! I love it!!

  • @anakiviaoliveira1709
    @anakiviaoliveira1709 Před 2 lety +6

    Fantastic content and animation. Thank you very much!

  • @mob.E30
    @mob.E30 Před 4 lety +4

    this video does a great job at showing the types of speciation. they just don't have the name of them. Like I want the name and then describe what it is

  • @josh7352
    @josh7352 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Nature never fails to edge me until combustion

  • @chae_doll
    @chae_doll Před 3 lety +7

    I was forced to come here by my teacher, but this is actually really cool.

  • @dirk0389
    @dirk0389 Před 11 lety +3

    I've never heard the term "ring species". I do believe there will be a book or two added to my shelves in the near future. Thanks!

  • @raaspider
    @raaspider Před 7 lety +1

    nice clear explanation on a very difficult subject... evolution at the molecular level is a beast to understand

    • @Raydensheraj
      @Raydensheraj Před 2 lety +1

      It never stops 😆...new hypotheses, new evidence, new ideas, new data...it doesn't end with Biology...a decent understanding of geologic, photography, microscopy, philosophy, history etc. all add to the way a individual pursues evolutionary theory...

  • @jeremygusi9949
    @jeremygusi9949 Před 3 lety

    greatest video on speciation out there

  • @CeceliaDiAngeloCeceWhittaker

    Awesome photography and animaton

  • @siddivinayaka6635
    @siddivinayaka6635 Před 6 lety

    The best video of 2018 that I saw ☺

  • @blueberry_borb
    @blueberry_borb Před 4 lety +1

    So fascinating!! :D Nature truly is amazing.

  • @janicekuharski8853
    @janicekuharski8853 Před 4 lety

    Well done! Hope teachers find this useful.

  • @avijitmajumder3345
    @avijitmajumder3345 Před 3 lety

    wow.. amazing this video fascinate me and also clear my doubt about speciation

  • @TheGrowCave
    @TheGrowCave Před 7 lety +1

    As a horticulturist I have thought about this for many, many years. It's so hard to wrap my head around the fact the Earth is 4.5 billion years old, and how long that really is. Speciation of plants and animals takes millions of years. period.

    • @LoricaLady
      @LoricaLady Před 6 lety +1

      But do you have any observable data to show "speciation of plants and animals takes millions of years"? Anyway, speciation is no example of evolution. Speciation (the creation of a new species) does not support evolutonism as it is an example of stasis and stasis is the exact opposite of evolution. For ex. over 300,000 species of beetles are all still beetles. There are thousands upon thousands of species of birds, bees, lizards, trees, bacteria, trees, yeast, flowers, whatever. If a new species develops with any life form at all, you can bet your bottom science dollar that it will still be just a beetle, bee, bacteria, tree, fish, or whatever.
      .
      We are supposed to fill in the blanks here with...faith...and think, "Well! If a new species develops then things just keep evolving and evolving." But the next step above a species, in the Annimal or Plant Kingdom, is a family. We aren't seeing any new families (much less any new order, class, phylum, kingdom) forming. Anywhere. Ever. Accorrding to Darwin's so called Tree of Life and peer reviewed evolutionary literature, new families, orders, classes and phylum have evolved. Over and over and over.
      .
      However, nature operates today as it did in the past. In the real world, with trillions of life forms, we never see anything developing above the level of a new species. The life forms out there have purportedly had eons and eons of ancestors preceding them which should be showing at least one example of a part this Family "transitioning" to be another family, etc..
      .
      But we only see that in the unverifiable, purely theoretical, realm of evolutionary literature, never in any life around us. If there is no evidence for transtiions from one family (not to mention from one class, order or phylum or kingdon) to another - and please provide data if you know of any such evidence - then there is no evidence for evolution. It's that simple. And that's just for starters.
      You are not a fish update. You have a Creator, your Heavenly Father, Who loves you. Find out who you really are.
      .
      Let's look at what some secular scientists have had to say that disagrees with evolutionism. We are told that beneficial mutations are an essential mechanism for evolution to occur, but H. J. Muller, who won a Nobel Prize for his work on mutations, said.... "It is entirely in line with the accidental nature of mutations that extensive tests have agreed in showing the vast majority of them detrimental to the organism in its job of surviving and reproducing -- good ones are so rare we can consider them all bad." H.J. Mueller, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 11:331.
      .
      Anyway, mutations are isolated, random, events that do not build on one another like Legos, and certainly have no ability to create totally new DNA as, for ex., would be needed to turn a leg into a wing. . As for natural selection, it does not lead to evolution, either. What does NS select from? What is already in the genome. It shuffles pre existing information or may cause a loss of information, not the new info you would need to turn a fin into, say, a foot. That is why no matter what it selects from in a fish or bird or lizard or bacteria or monkey or tree or flower you will still have a fish, bird, lizard, bacteria, etc. . But, if you can, give data - not just theories presented as facts in the conveniently invisible past - that a Life Form A turned into Life Form B as the result of NS. In other words show that a species in any genus went to the next level in the Animal Kingdom (ditto for plants) a new Family.
      .
      There are trillions of life forms on this planet. We're told it happened in the unverifiable past. Why don't we see any species in any Genus transitioning to be a new member of an animal or plant Family today?
      .
      Let's see what some other secular scientists have to say about evolution. . Bowler, Peter J., Review of In Search of Deep Time by Henry Gee (Free Press, 1999), American Scientist (vol. 88, March/April 2000), p. 169. "We cannot identify ancestors or 'missing links,' and we cannot devise testable theories to explain how particular episodes of evolution came about. Gee is adamant that all the popular stories about how the first amphibians conquered the dry land, how the birds developed wings and feathers for flying, how the dinosaurs went extinct, and how humans evolved from apes are just products of our imagination, driven by prejudices and preconceptions."
      .
      "There are only two possibilities as to how life arose. One is spontaneous generation arising to evolution; the other is a supernatural creative act of God. There is no third possibility. Spontaneous generation, that life arose from non-living matter was scientifically disproved 120 years ago by Louis Pasteur and others. That leaves us with the only possible conclusion that life arose as a supernatural creative act of God. I will not accept that philosophically because I do not want to believe in God. Therefore, I choose to believe in that which I know is scientifically impossible; spontaneous generation arising to evolution." (Nobel Prize winner Wald, George, "Innovation and Biology," Scientific American, Vol. 199, Sept. 1958, p. 100)
      .
      "The pathetic thing about it is that many scientists are trying to prove the doctrine of evolution, which no science can do." (Dr. Robert A. Milikan, physicist and Nobel Prize winner, speech before the American Chemical Society.)
      .
      "Hypothesis [evolution] based on no evidence and irreconcilable with the facts....These classical evolutionary theories are a gross over-simplification of an immensely complex and intricate mass of facts, and it amazes me that they are swallowed so uncritically and readily, and for such a long time, by so many scientists without a murmur of protest." (Sir Ernst Chan, Nobel Prize winner for developing penicillin)
      .
      On this webpage you can see Nobel Prize winning scientists, other secular scientists - including some world famous evolutionists - admitting there is no evidence for evolution. You can see them calling evolution a kind of religion, something that leads to "anti knowledge", etc. Notice how many of these secular scientists acknowledge evidence for a Creator. freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/1435562/posts
      .
      Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed shows the politics of Neo Darwinism which harasses and expels those in academia and the media who even hint that there MIGHT be evidence for a Creator. czcams.com/video/4HErmp5Pzqw/video.html
      .
      And here are some interesting pictures of trilobites, extinct deep sea creatures on mountain peaks.. www.bing.com/images/search?q=trilobites+on+top+of+mountains&qpvt=trilobites+on+top+of+mountains&qpvt=trilobites+on+top+of+mountains&qpvt=trilobites+on+top+of+mountains&FORM=IGRE
      We are told those trilobites, and mega amounts of sea shells, mollusks, etc., were moved from the ocean floors to wrap around mountains all over the world after millions of years of "plate tectonics" movements. Look at the exquisite condition of some of those fossils. There are countless billions of such life forms that are highly recognizable. It's like the "plate tectonics" people never heard of erosion. Further, 90% of th fossils on land, from coast to coast, from below ground to those mountains heights, are marine. Now what dumped all those sea life creatures onto land everywhere?? Hmmm...
      .
      You were created in the very image and likeness of the Creator. He is your Father and loves you and wants you to know Him, and love Him too. Why trade in that fantastic truth for a bunch of mumbo jumbo pseudo science that even secular scientists can't get consensus on? Rhetorical Q.

    • @junodonatus4906
      @junodonatus4906 Před 3 lety +1

      @@LoricaLady
      DNA, the radiation of life on this planet, radiometric dating, fossil record, homologous features, phylogenic similarity.....all of these are observations that are not only independent but converge on the conclusion of macroevolution.
      "For ex. over 300,000 species of beetles are all still beetles. "
      And whales and dolphins are still mammals, but that doesn't mean that they haven't changed from being land mammals over time. We are all still carbon-based life forms but that doesn't mean that adaptive radiation hasn't taken place. Birds, as well, don't have any features that are unique....all of their modern features existed in their dinosaur ancestors.

    • @eclepticearth
      @eclepticearth Před 6 měsíci

      @@junodonatus4906 Waste of metaphorical ink. @lorical lady is parroting the same old tired worn refuted saws that were presented right after Darwin's publication. And after thousands of new fossils, the decoding of genetics, the reconstruction of tectonic plate movements, and a host of other evidence . . . the ramblings of poorly translated parochial Iron Age observations wins out? If there was a Creator, she made a universe perfectly disguised to look like it evolved. And I have not forgotten to sharpen Occam's Razor!

  • @renukadevkatte6107
    @renukadevkatte6107 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this video! It was really helpful to me 👍

  • @nathaliaacosta1512
    @nathaliaacosta1512 Před 9 měsíci

    Me parecen súper interesantes los temas acerca de la evolución. Siempre ha Sido uno de mis temas favoritos, más la especiación, en la próxima semana expondré sobre este tema en mi clase de biología en la universidad

  • @louisette02
    @louisette02 Před 11 lety +1

    Well done!

  • @sayantanchatterjee3874

    Great graphics!

  • @ShwetaSingh-zt2qd
    @ShwetaSingh-zt2qd Před 6 lety

    Great video..helped a lot...thankuh so much😀

  • @SalakoIshola
    @SalakoIshola Před 17 dny

    Great lesson!

  • @Alyenbird
    @Alyenbird Před 11 lety +5

    Nature isn't clear cut and species is a necessarily artificial concept. I find it better to think of species as a continuum of interbreeding populations, that are mostly unable to interbreed with less closely related populations. However this view is much more difficult to explain to non-biologists. Considering this video is geared toward a lay audience, the given definition is one that works well in a generalized sense. If you are fascinated by blurry species lines look up "ring species".

  • @Itswat3vah
    @Itswat3vah Před 6 měsíci

    Great explanation

  • @iamgod3411
    @iamgod3411 Před 3 lety +5

    Needed this to argue with a pastor over evolution.

  • @footfault1941
    @footfault1941 Před 4 lety

    An orthodox speciation (or precondition for it) is explained. Currently, the issue may be settled like this. Viewed in this way, however, difficulties in gradualism becomes clearer. Yet, much to be studied & analysed for more coherent reasoning.

  • @martinduran10
    @martinduran10 Před 4 lety +8

    send me the answers for this:
    Using the information from the video, explain how birds evolved into different species in each part of the island.
    Your answer MUST INCLUDE the following terms: reproductive isolation, geographical isolation, genetic mutations, gradual change, different habitats.

    • @shelovewazz
      @shelovewazz Před 3 lety +1

      no

    • @L.S4444
      @L.S4444 Před 3 lety +1

      Look it up

    • @martinduran10
      @martinduran10 Před 3 lety

      @@L.S4444 hahahaha I didn’t need your help, I got a 100% on the exam

    • @junodonatus4906
      @junodonatus4906 Před 3 lety +4

      @@martinduran10
      Not sure why you couldn't do it yourself in the first place. It's only an 8 1/2 minute video. Are you THAT lazy?

    • @martinduran10
      @martinduran10 Před 3 lety

      @@junodonatus4906 yea

  • @sarahgb2830
    @sarahgb2830 Před 9 lety +9

    I loooooooooooove this video, one of my favorites, love the graphics and designs.

    • @walnerclajus3869
      @walnerclajus3869 Před 3 lety

      That's' not science. That is emotion, faith, anything but science. I don't believe in speciation and no one could ever prove that to me with scientific data.

    • @AustinALiboiron
      @AustinALiboiron Před 3 lety

      @@walnerclajus3869 Very cool!

    • @jaysant6958
      @jaysant6958 Před 4 měsíci

      @@walnerclajus3869What about the Zonkey? How do you get around that?

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great video, thank you very much , note to self(nts) watched all of it 8:19

  • @pauliusmilieska8135
    @pauliusmilieska8135 Před 2 lety

    I like this .Thanks

  • @jeniffercampos6769
    @jeniffercampos6769 Před 2 měsíci

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    A diversificação de espécies acontece quando um grupo se separa geograficamente ou se torna diferente o suficiente para não procriar entre si.
    Um exemplo é uma ilha vulcânica colonizada por aves do continente.
    Condições para especiação: isolamento reprodutivo entre populações.
    O isolamento reprodutivo pode ocorrer por deriva genética ao longo de milhares de gerações.
    Cientistas classificam espécies isoladas pelo tempo e diferenças genéticas, não por cruzamentos.
    Diferenças no canto das aves podem indicar incompatibilidade reprodutiva.
    Espécies isoladas geneticamente tornam-se espécies diferentes ao longo do tempo.
    Classificação de espécies considera isolamento e diferenças genéticas.
    Fragmentação do habitat em novas regiões pode levar a especiação.
    Aves do leste evoluem penas chamativas para atrair fêmeas.
    Aves do oeste enfrentam condições mais difíceis e não desenvolvem plumagem elaborada.
    Isolamento prolongado leva ao surgimento de incompatibilidade reprodutiva.
    Mesmo achando atraentes, fêmeas do oeste não conseguem procriar com machos do leste.
    Espécies relacionadas podem coexistir, mas não se reproduzir entre si.
    ➡️ Fragmentações repetidas na Nova Guiné contribuíram para a diversidade das aves-do-paraíso.
    Especiação é um processo contínuo que explica a variedade de espécies de aves.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @dirk0389
    @dirk0389 Před 11 lety +1

    Using the definition you used here, Arctic Terns and Common Terns would be the same species - They can (and do) interbreed. Their offspring can also continue to breed, unlike other hybrids.

  • @eliseolopez2790
    @eliseolopez2790 Před rokem

    The language of speciation has grown more complex

  • @zeno8509
    @zeno8509 Před 6 lety +1

    Whats the songs name? 0:04

  • @PurpleHeadedWarriorz
    @PurpleHeadedWarriorz Před 8 lety +3

    Great really helped me understand more about speciation

    • @loricalass4068
      @loricalass4068 Před 7 lety +1

      Speciation does not support evolutionism as it is an example of stasis and stasis is the exact opposite of evolution. For ex. over 200,000 species of beetles are all still beetles. There are thousands upon thousands of species of birds, bees, lizards, trees, bacteria, trees, yeast, flowers, whatever. If a new species develops with any of those groups at all, you can bet your bottom science dollars that it will still be just a beetle, bee, bacteria, tree, fish, or whatever.
      We are supposed to fill in the blanks here with...faith...and think, "Well! If new species develops then things just keep evolving and evolving." But the next step above a species, in the Animal or Plant Kingdom, is a Family. We aren't seeing any new Families forming. Anywhere. Ever. According to Darwin's so called Tree of Life and peer reviewed evolutionary literature, new Families have evolved. Over and over and over.
      However, nature operates today as it did in the past. In the real world, with trillions of life forms, we never see anything developing above the level of a new species. The life forms out there have purportedly had eons and eons of ancestors preceding them which should be showing at least one example of a part this Family "transitioning" to be another Family.
      But we only see that in the unverifiable, purely theoretical, realm of evolutionary literature, never in any life around us. If there is no evidence for transitions from one Family to another - and please provide data if you know of any such evidence - then there is no evidence for evolution. But that's just for starters.
      Evolution is pure pseudo science and teaches you that you are a fish update. You are not. You have a Heavenly Father Who loves you and created you, in HIS image not in the image of Lucy or some other transition du jour. Find out who you really are.

    • @annpriess4690
      @annpriess4690 Před 7 lety +2

      What's evolutionism? Please try to follow. EVOLUTION is a change in a population's genetic makeup over time. These changes add up to new species being formed. Not too abstract. It can even be measured.

  • @noalandau9811
    @noalandau9811 Před 2 lety

    Anyone know the melody at the start?

  • @riccardomoscatello2030
    @riccardomoscatello2030 Před 7 lety +1

    How do they develop unique traits that the mainland bird doesn't have at all, like long colored feathers? What is the process that triggers this change? behaviour?

    • @2MC
      @2MC Před 6 lety +3

      Variation in the gene pool, mutations, and natural selection. There are all sorts of mutations that can happen, and if it happens to be favorable to the organism in that it can survive and reproduce, then those genes are passed on. Whether it's feathers, a mating dance, or some other trait. Remember, these traits take a long, long time to evolve.

    • @TurdFurgeson571
      @TurdFurgeson571 Před 6 lety +1

      Non-random selection of random mutations over time (usually a LOT of time).
      If I made a clone of you it wouldn't be exactly like you. It would be slightly different because of some random mutations along the alleles that make up the genes.
      Now, imagine what happens when half of your genes come from your mom and the other half from your dad, and add to that the aforementioned random mutations. If the environment your in is such that it favors any of these mutations, it's more likely that you'll survive long enough to reproduce, thus passing on these mutations, thus giving your children the same advantage you had, in turn, giving them the chance to reproduce, passing on their genes and that mutation. And on and on. Each time making the effect of that gene more pronounced (i.e. those birds didn't suddenly produce a generation with great big colorful feathers, it took many generations for such a trait to become so pronounced).
      That's a pretty simplistic breakdown. It's more complex than that, but for a comment on CZcams it's more than enough. Just know that it gets way more interesting from there.
      Stay curious

    • @falcoperegrinus82
      @falcoperegrinus82 Před 6 lety

      The elaborate plumage in the Birds of Paradise evolved due to Sexual Selection. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_selection

  • @fernandrums
    @fernandrums Před 4 lety +1

    Adaptation... 😇 ✌🏼 Saludos cordiales

  • @AcademiaBiologiaDGEP
    @AcademiaBiologiaDGEP Před 5 lety

    Hello, I'd like to add a spanish translation, but the option it's disabled.

  • @letmerambleonaboutbio4884

    I am confused. How would the island have vegetation if no birds had ever come there to bring seeds (which then grow and become trees) to the island?

    • @jakeweinsheimer6023
      @jakeweinsheimer6023 Před 2 lety +5

      Other animals can bring seeds such as deer that swim to the island or bugs, Wind can also blow seeds

  • @mateogonzalez5678
    @mateogonzalez5678 Před 3 lety +1

    When they kink-shame you now but your kink leads to the evolution of your species-

  • @patroclus2474
    @patroclus2474 Před 6 lety

    Awesome

  • @L.S4444
    @L.S4444 Před 3 lety +14

    Why does the Male bird look so depresso expresso? (Well, he did kinda got dumped lol.) 3:33

  • @MrAhmadZ
    @MrAhmadZ Před 9 měsíci +1

    it has been 10 Years.

  • @aelphind4954
    @aelphind4954 Před 4 lety

    What's the song?

  • @MemphiStig
    @MemphiStig Před 4 měsíci

    Life finds a way.

  • @avisdasarp
    @avisdasarp Před 11 lety +3

    Can we apply the same theory to humans as well ?

  • @khmak9387
    @khmak9387 Před měsícem

    Is it possible to have speciation *without* geographical isolation?

  • @gwynethbautista1034
    @gwynethbautista1034 Před 3 lety +1

    what are the two isolation here?

    • @nilskiemle9556
      @nilskiemle9556 Před 3 lety +1

      Is this envi science subject? Pelska ka rin ba? Hahaha

  • @arunprajapati2098
    @arunprajapati2098 Před 4 lety +1

    The bird of main land and of iland come back togeher in same environment than would they beome able to reproduction or the island birds able to turn in actual one.

    • @jenniferherbert9904
      @jenniferherbert9904 Před 4 lety +1

      If they no longer recognize each other as the same species or if their gametes are unable to produce offspring anymore than no even if they live together in the same environment they no longer reproduce together that is how you see so many different kinds of birds in the same area they evolved apart and came back together as differnet species.

  • @vincentsvirtues2777
    @vincentsvirtues2777 Před 6 lety +2

    Does anybody know what kind of birds have that fancy head plumage like at 6:05?

    • @Usulcardo
      @Usulcardo Před 5 lety +1

      The King of Saxonny bird of paradise

  • @jaysant6958
    @jaysant6958 Před 4 měsíci

    3:21 Can’t they still technically reproduce, and the example is just a matter of not wanting to because of the foreign tune and/or other things from the long years or isolation?

  • @Jahlord1919
    @Jahlord1919 Před 5 lety +1

    someone explain me how a same type of bird isolated in a different island with the same environment for it to survive would alter the gene pool

    • @DudeMcClure666
      @DudeMcClure666 Před 5 lety +1

      genetic drift is one possibility

    • @Raydensheraj
      @Raydensheraj Před 2 lety

      @@DudeMcClure666 In smaller population gene drift is definitely the best answer...

  • @JeffSans
    @JeffSans Před 5 lety

    amazing. now i understood more about how these birds of paradise and other birds had evolved

    • @catkrew6690
      @catkrew6690 Před 5 lety

      😠😡 They haven't evolved.. It's a stupid belief that you should not believe.... God made them 👏💖😇....

    • @catkrew6690
      @catkrew6690 Před 5 lety

      Ari Mathieu, how about you stop

  • @Jahlord1919
    @Jahlord1919 Před 5 lety

    what about on dogs? how does this apply?

    • @gg3675
      @gg3675 Před 4 lety +2

      Dog breeds were created through artificial selection. The different types of dogs we see are one species, and the vast array of types were mostly bred for intentionally by humans. However, the different species of wolves we see are the product of geographic isolation as described in the video. Arctic Wolves and Red Wolves share a common ancestor, but have evolved differences over many generations due to their geographic isolation from one another.

  • @eliseolopez2790
    @eliseolopez2790 Před rokem

    I am blown out of my slippers 🦘

  • @TheGrowCave
    @TheGrowCave Před 7 lety

    Facts

  • @liamcoughlin4475
    @liamcoughlin4475 Před 6 lety +1

    I like the bird at 8:00

  • @ethanskip
    @ethanskip Před 4 lety +1

    What is the piano song at the beginning

  • @johno7011
    @johno7011 Před 4 lety +1

    One of the questions my teacher asked in this video is that if she pronounced species right, like what?

    • @babyvia6712
      @babyvia6712 Před 3 lety

      I was wondering that same thing a few hours ago. is it spee-shees or spee-sees?? I think it's the second one

  • @morpher728
    @morpher728 Před 5 lety +3

    All these intros but there's never a part 2

  • @jamesturner5406
    @jamesturner5406 Před 8 lety +2

    Hi Miss Streets

  • @jakeweinsheimer6023
    @jakeweinsheimer6023 Před 2 lety

    nice

  • @MOON-lk3fz
    @MOON-lk3fz Před 3 lety

    So the ancestor of the different species of birds of paradise is like Eevee from Pokemon?

  • @eliseolopez2790
    @eliseolopez2790 Před rokem

    Domestication is a sustained ,significant degree of control over reproduction

  • @AnabelleRose_
    @AnabelleRose_ Před 5 lety +1

    So anyone just come here bc the music is cool?

  • @serverlan763
    @serverlan763 Před 2 lety

    I would love to see humans used as the examples here

  • @samuelhodge9137
    @samuelhodge9137 Před 5 lety +3

    I’m just here because of IB

  • @asepkriting1619
    @asepkriting1619 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow keren

  • @yvonnerogers6429
    @yvonnerogers6429 Před 3 měsíci

    👍🏻

  • @krabiah
    @krabiah Před 11 lety

    {وَمَا مِن دَآبَّةٍ فِي الأَرْضِ وَلاَ طَائِرٍ يَطِيرُ بِجَنَاحَيْهِ إِلاَّ أُمَمٌ أَمْثَالُكُم مَّا فَرَّطْنَا فِي الكِتَابِ مِن شَيْءٍ ثُمَّ إِلَى رَبِّهِمْ يُحْشَرُونَ }الأنعام38

  • @yasfi5196
    @yasfi5196 Před 4 lety

    But.. How natural selection and sexual selection in the first place can lead to speciation? It's only possible through mutation, isn't it?

    • @hamish3999
      @hamish3999 Před 3 lety +2

      Essentially, yes. Mutations occur at random (except in the case of cancer from UV light or by chromosomal mutations), so it is only through mutations, sexual and natural selection that speciation can occur. Bear in mind that speciation and mutations occur over a very long time, through thousands of generations.

    • @Dr.IanPlect
      @Dr.IanPlect Před rokem

      @@hamish3999 wrong

  • @jot_1867
    @jot_1867 Před 8 lety +4

    Mr Ham made me watch this

  • @luvsara_8
    @luvsara_8 Před 3 lety +2

    i could be sleep rn

  • @alyssaburdick5710
    @alyssaburdick5710 Před 5 lety

    How come they can’t just make a hybrid?

    • @hamish3999
      @hamish3999 Před 3 lety

      It's because their genomes are too different from one another to successfully mate and produce fertile offspring. In the case of Ligers, a hybrid of a Tiger and a Lion, they are genetically similar enough to produce a hybrid offspring, but the offspring themselves will be infertile. Hybrids between species are not very common and have very strict requirements.

  • @eliseolopez2790
    @eliseolopez2790 Před rokem

    I will turn the skies into flying toys

  • @pauraque
    @pauraque Před 2 lety

    WEGU and GWGU would beg to differ...

  • @JTTunes1204
    @JTTunes1204 Před 3 lety +2

    IB Bio gang wya

  • @JennaHasm
    @JennaHasm Před měsícem

    With the isms and the game and the new English language...

  • @harrybaxter7333
    @harrybaxter7333 Před 3 lety

    cute vid bro

  • @helenchufe4074
    @helenchufe4074 Před 3 lety

    Este si que esta en ingles

  • @SimpleRedditStoriesTv
    @SimpleRedditStoriesTv Před 3 lety

    The male eastern Birds simping hard

  • @goldiqbal5907
    @goldiqbal5907 Před 3 lety

    S I THINK U R 80% CORRECT

  • @abiwatsn
    @abiwatsn Před 4 lety

    why do i feel so sad for the male bird

  • @ApplianceOperator
    @ApplianceOperator Před 11 lety +1

    They're dealing with facts here, not fiction.

  • @epictalgon
    @epictalgon Před 5 lety

    bye

  • @gregorysagegreene
    @gregorysagegreene Před rokem

    Basic Darwin History.

  • @knyy_
    @knyy_ Před 5 lety +4

    island birds are incels lol

  • @chriskong9292
    @chriskong9292 Před 5 lety

    speeshees

  • @tsubasa316
    @tsubasa316 Před 4 lety +1

    Who else came from Jennifer nuskiewicz

  • @point3zero8
    @point3zero8 Před 6 lety +1

    I knew I was a different species than Tyrone or Shaniqua.

  • @tommcmurtrie9687
    @tommcmurtrie9687 Před 8 lety +3

    coyi

  • @jyy9624
    @jyy9624 Před 8 měsíci

    Save Papuan habitats

  • @joaquinsedamano
    @joaquinsedamano Před 3 lety +1

    ¿Quién más está aquí por la tarea del resumen de biología? xddd