Evolution and Biodiversity: Miller Chapter 5 Powerpoint Adapted From
Evolution and Biodiversity: Miller Chapter 5 Powerpoint Adapted From
Essential Questions
Be able to describe how the earth is just right for life What is evolution? How has evolution lead to the current diversity of organisms? What is an ecological niche? How does it relate to adaptation to changing environmental conditions? How do extinction of species and formation of new species affect biodiversity?
Water exists in 3 phases Right size (=gravitational mass to keep atmosphere) Resilient and adaptive Each species here today represents a long chain of evolution and each plays a role in its respective ecosystem
Biological Evolution
Insects and amphibians invade the land Plants invade the land Fossils become abundant
Age of reptiles
Recorded human history begins 1/4 second before midnight Origin of life (3.63.8 billion years ago)
Fossil Record
Most of what we know of the history of life on earth comes from fossils (SJ Gould) Give us physical evidence of organisms
Show us internal structure
Other info from ancient rocks, ice core, DNA The whale as an example Other evidence here
A heritable trait that enables organisms to survive AND reproduce is called an adaptation
Stabilizing Selection
Number of individuals
Natural selection
Number of individuals
Coloration of snails Average remains the same Number of individuals with intermediate coloration increases Eliminates Fringe Individuals
Coloration of snails
Directional Selection
Pesticide Resistance
Pest resurgence
Antibiotic Resistance Grants Finch Beak Data With directional selection, allele frequencies tend to shift in response to directional changes in the environment
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/libr ary/05/2/l_052_04.html
Stabilizing
Favors individuals with an average genetic makeup
Only the middle reproduce Population looks more similar over time (elim. extremes)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evoluti on/library/05/2/l_052_04.html
Most individuals without trait would have to die in order for the trait to predominate and be passed on
Take Home #1
When faced with a change in environmental condition, a population of a species can get MAD:
MIGRATE to a more favorable location ALREADY be adapted DIE
Natural selection can only act on inherited alleles already present in the populationdo not think that the environment creates favorable heritable characteristics! Soooo.how do new alleles arise??????
MUTATIONS, MY FRIENDS!
Changes in the structure of the DNA Adds genetic diversity to the population May or may not be adaptive
Depends on the environment!
Sooooo.Whats Evolution?
The change in a POPULATIONS genetic makeup (gene pool) over time (successive generations)
Those with selective advantages (i.e., adaptations), survive and reproduce All species descended from earlier ancestor species
Microevolution Small genetic changes in a population such as the spread of a mutation or the change in the frequency of a single allele due to selection (changes to gene pool)
Not possible without genetic variability in a pop
Macroevolution
Long term, large scale evolutionary changes through which new species are formed and others
Microevolution
Changes in a populations gene pool over time.
Genetic variability within a population is the catalyst
Natural Selection (more fit = more offspring) Gene flow (movement of genes between pops) Genetic drift (change in gene pool due to random/chance events)
Camouflage of moths increases survival from predators Directional selection caused a shift away from light-gray towards dark-gray moths
Genetic Drift
Random change in allele frequencies over generations brought about by chance
In the absence of other forces, drift leads to loss of genetic diversity
Elephant seals, cheetahs
Genetic Drift
Magnitude of drift is greatest in small populations
Speciation
Adapted to cold through heavier fur, short ears, short legs, short nose. White fur matches snow for camouflage.
Northern population Spreads northward and southward and separates Arctic Fox Different environmental conditions lead to different selective pressures and evolution into two different species.
Southern population
Gray Fox
Adapted to heat through lightweight fur and long ears, legs, and nose, which give off more heat.
Speciation
Two species arise from one
Requires Reproductive isolation
Geographic: Physically separated Temporal: Mate at different times Behavioral: Bird calls / mating rituals Anatomical: Picture a mouse and an elephant hooking up Genetic Inviability: Mules
Allopatric
Speciation that occurs when 2 or more populations of a species are geographically isolated from one another The allele frequencies in these populations change Members become so different that that can no no longer interbreed See animation
Sympatric
Populations evolve with overlapping ranges Behavioral barrier or hybridization or polyploidy
TAKE HOME #2
Macroevolution is the cumulative result of a series of microevolutionary events
Typically seen in fossil record Nobody around to see the small, gene pool changes over time.
Coevolution
Interactions between species can cause microevolution
Changes in the gene pool of one species can cause changes in the gene pool of the other
Adaptation follows adaptation in something of a long term arms race between interacting populations of different populations
The Red Queen Effect
And NUH is the letter I use to spell Nutches, Who live in small caves, known as Niches, for hutches. These Nutches have troubles, the biggest of which is The fact there are many more Nutches than Niches. Each Nutch in a Nich knows that some other Nutch Would like to move into his Nich very much. So each Nutch in a Nich has to watch that small Nich Or Nutches who haven't got Niches will snitch.
-On Beyond Zebra (1955) Dr. Seuss
Niches
A species functional role in an ecosystem Involves everything that affects its survival and reproduction Includes range of tolerance of all abiotic factors Trophic characteristics How it interacts with biotic and abiotic factors Role it plays in energy flow and matter cycling Fundamental Niche Full potential range of physical chemical and biological conditions and resources it could theoretically use if there was no direct competition from other species Realized Niche Part of its niche actually occupied Generalist vs. Specialist Lives many different places, eat many foods, tolerate a wide range of conditions vs few, few, intolerant Which strategy is better in a stable environment vs unstable?
POLLENPEEPERS
POLLENPEEPER EVOLUTION
Niche Overlap
Number of individuals
Niche separation Generalist species with a narrow niche Generalist species with a broad niche
Era
Period
Millions of
years ago Cenozoic Quaternary Today 65 Cretaceous Mesozoic Jurassic 180 Triassic 250 Permian Carboniferous Paleozoic 345 Devonian Silurian Ordovician Cambrian 500
Extinction
Tertiary
Extinction
Extinction
Extinction
Extinction
Extinction
Extinction
Local, ecological and true extinction The ultimate fate of all species just as death is for all individual organisms 99.9% of all the species that have ever existed are now extinct To a very close approximation, all species are extinct Background vs. Mass Extinction Low rate vs. 25-90% of total Five great mass extinctions in which numerous new species (including mammals) evolved to fill new or vacated niches in changed environments 10 million years or more for adaptive radiations to rebuild biological diversity following a mass extinction Extinctions open up new opportunities for speciation and adaptive radiation..BUT you can have too much of a good thing!
Human Activities
Habitat Loss/Fragmentation Introduction of exotic/invasive species Pollution Commercial harvesting Accidental killing (tuna nets) Harassing Pet Trade Urbanization Damming/Flooding Agricultural conversion
If
the environment changes rapidly and The species living in these environments do not already possess genes which enable survival in the face of such change and Random mutations do not accumulate quickly enough then,
Biodiversity
Speciation Extinction=Biodiversity
Humans major force in the premature extinction of species. Extinction rate increased by 100-1000 times the natural background rate. As we grow in population over next 50 years, we are expected to take over more of the earths surface and productivity. This may cause the premature extinction of up to a QUARTER of the earths current species and constitute a SIXTH mass extinction
Genetic engineering wont solve this problem Only takes existing genes and moves them around
CITES (late 1970s)-prohibits trade and commerce of threatened and endangered species
By 1998: signed by 144 countries