With another two units of evolutionary time having passed, our strings of beads may look like this:
| Species B | Species C | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Notice that you can still see the beads derived from the prototype common ancestor A0, as well as those from the more immediate common ancestor, Ancestor Species A. Hence the beads (representing bundles of genetic information) predict characteristics or properties that will be shared between Species B and Species C and help you track their evolutionary history (phylogeny) back to a common ancestor.
Return to Step 1: Evolution in prototype common ancestor species, A0.
Return to Step 2. Reproductive isolation occurs between two populations of Ancestor Species A.