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How does natural selection change the DNA of a population of a certain species to create a new species? In order for a new species to evolve into another won't new DNA have to be formed some how? If so where does this new DNA come from?
First, DNA is comprised of many, many genes. The genes are what give species/individuals their traits. During speciation (formation of new species), whole DNA strands are not created...instead, some fraction of the existing DNA strand (some number of its genes) is changed. How many genes? No specific number...just whatever is enough to separate the species into distinct groups that don't/can't inter-breed anymore.
Second, some mechanisms of evolution increase genetic variability (make new or different genes in the DNA strand) and some mechanisms decrease variability.
Natural selection decreases variability. You may have heard of the catch-phrase "survival of the fittest". Over the whole range of variations within a species (e.g., tall/short, fast/slow, etc.), natural selection tends to favor beneficial traits (genes) and eliminate the traits (genes) that are not as good. It's not making new genes, but instead it's favoring the propagation of certain genes. Which ones? Whichever work the best in whatever ecological situation the species is in.
New information (genes) can come from things like:
- mutation - These are often DNA copying errors which can do things like rearrange, duplicate, flip, or modify genes. Note that these changes can be considered "new" genes because they are different than they used to be. But big changes in an organism can also come from the changes in the interactions of genes (not just new genes).
- recombination - reshuffling of genes during sexual reproduction
- gene flow - influx of new genes into a population from another similar population that was previously separated