Evolution of Armor Plating in Three-spined Sticklebacks EEB 440: Biology of Fish Isaac Fine, Allie Leitch, Karen Baweja, Meagan Crofoot.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evolution Chapter 16.
Advertisements

Ecosystems – Species Diversity & Environmental Interactions After this unit you should be able to: Explain the process of natural selection and cite evidence.
A method of quantifying stability and change in a population.
Mechanisms of Evolution and Speciation
Evolution for Ecology. The Importance of Evolution in Ecology  Ecologists study proximate or “how” questions:  How nutrients flow through ecosystems.
Examine how life continues to evolve within a changing environment
Explain why variations in a population are seen as a bell shaped curve. Agenda for Friday Feb 20 th 1.Patterns and Mechanism notes 2.Go over variation.
Evolution of Populations. Population Genetics Natural Selection: nature selects which individuals survive and reproduce- Evolution: occurs as a populations.
Implementing behaviour and life history strategies in IBMs by Geir Huse Department of Fisheries and Marine Biology, University of Bergen, Norway Lecture.
Chapter 16 Evolution Of Populations.
Evolution of Biodiversity
THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. HOW DOES EVOLUTION LEAD TO THE FORMATION OF ALL THE DIFFERENT ORGANISMS, OR SPECIES, WE SEE ON THE PLANET? FIRST WE MUST DEFINE.
Theory of Evolution Chapter 15.
ScienceShot: Dad's Odor Splits a Species Key words: Sexual imprinting (male/female), (phenotype), speciation,(species), ecological speciation, divergence.
Biology Chapter 11 Notes.
How Does Evolution Work? Individual organisms cannot evolve. Populations of a particular species evolve. Natural selection acts on the range of phenotypes.
Population GENETICS.
Ecosystem Diversity 1.What is biodiversity? 2.Where did all these species come from? 3.Can new species form? 4.How do humans effect biodiversity? 5.How.
BIODIVERSITY + EVOLUTION Chapter 4. BRIDGING THE GAP  Biodiversity is all of the differences amongst the living world.  So how do topics already covered.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.  A species can be defined as a group of organisms whose members can breed and produce fertile offspring, but.
Chapter 24: The Origin of Species Macroevolution Macroevolution Cumulative effects of speciation over vast amounts of time Cumulative effects of speciation.
Speciation Until recently, over 500 species of cichlid fishes lived in East Africa’s Lake Victoria Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.
Discover Biology FIFTH EDITION CHAPTER 19 Speciation and the Origins Of Biological Diversity © 2012 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Anu Singh-Cundy Michael.
Natural Selection Problem
For natural selection to work – traits must vary Individuals & pop’ns do vary extensively –Beaks of G. fortis –Color spots on guppies Existing variation.
Biodiversity Chapter 4 Part I.
Evolution. Breaking Down the Definitions Honors 1.Evolution 2.Natural selection 3.Adaptation 4.Fitness 5.Convergent evolution 6.Divergent evolution 7.Adaptive.
HOW DOES EVOLUTION WORK? By: A Good Student. What is Evolution?  Evolution is descent with modification.  On a small scale, this can be changes in the.
Tuesday April 15 th Essential Question: What resources are essential for an organism to survive Have out Cytochrome C activity from yesterday Today how.
Chapter 15 and 16 Evolution - Change through time.
Speciation Biology 10 at GI Biology 11. Speciation  The development of a new species  Usually the result of reproductive isolation How does this occur?
What is Speciation? Speciation is the formation of new biological species, usually by the division of a single species into two or more genetically distinct.
Evolution and Population GENETICS
Mechanisms of Evolution Biology Mr. Solis. Populations, Not Individuals Evolve An organism cannot evolve a new phenotype, but rather natural selection.
Evolution Pre-AP Biology. Charles Darwin Known as the Father of Evolution Known as the Father of Evolution Wrote book On the Origin of Species Wrote book.
Mechanisms of Evolution
Speciation and Macroevolution
5 Evolution and Community Ecology CHAPTER. Black and White, and Spread All Over Zebra mussels and quagga mussels were accidentally introduced into Lake.
Adaptations and Population Genetics. Evolution Types of Adaptation  An adaptation is a trait shaped by natural selection that increases an organism’s.
Evolution Biological changes over time Vocabulary Species – a population of organisms that can produce healthy, fertile offspring. Adaptation – inherited.
ORIGIN OF SPECIES CH 24. Speciation: origin of new species Microevolution: changes in allele frequencies Macroevolution: changes that result in formation.
What is a phylogenetic tree? Agenda for Tuesday Nov 30 th 1.Mechanisms of Evolution notes.
V. Evolution by Natural Selection ▪ Biological Evolution: the process whereby earth’s life changes over time through changes in genetic characteristics.
Bio 7: General Biology II Evolutionary, Organismal, & Ecological Biology Dr. Diane Livio myetudes.org/portal MW 2:30-4:30 (CMS 229)
5 Evolution and Community Ecology CHAPTER. Black and White, and Spread All Over Zebra mussels and quagga mussels were accidentally introduced into Lake.
17.3 Darwin and Natural Selection: What Darwin knew  Darwin understood the fossil record and explained it by combining the two popular ideas of gradualism.
SC.912.L  The variability among living organisms from all sources including, terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological.
15.3 Shaping Evolutionary Theory 7(E) Analyze and evaluate the relationship of natural selection to adaptation and to the development of diversity in and.
Evolution and Biodiversity G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 14 th Edition Chapter 5 Part 1 G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 14 th.
Evolution and Biodiversity Chapter 4. Core Case Study: Life on Earth Uniquely suited for life –Temperature range –Liquid water –Gravitational mass –Oxygen.
Ecological Speciation- Sticklebacks
Evolution, Biodiversity, & Population Ecology
Genetic Equilibrium Allele frequency in a gene pool is not changing
Section 3: Shaping Evolutionary Theory
Natural Selection Lab 14.
Evolution of Populations
Evolution Is fundamentally, a genetic process
Patterns and Mechanisms of Evolution
Chapter 4 Evolution & Biodiversity
Evolution Is fundamentally, a genetic process
Mechanisms for Evolution
Natural Selection & Evolution
CHAPTER 24 THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES.
Chapter 16 Evolution Of Population.
Natural Selection Natural selection: organisms with favorable traits for a particular environment survive, reproduce, and pass these traits on to the next.
Human Evolution.
Ch. 17 The evolution of populations
Biological Evolution and Environmental Factors
15.2 Mechanisms of Evolution
The Evolution of Populations Ch. 11
Presentation transcript:

Evolution of Armor Plating in Three-spined Sticklebacks EEB 440: Biology of Fish Isaac Fine, Allie Leitch, Karen Baweja, Meagan Crofoot

Three Spined Stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus Frequent the Northern Hemisphere Typically 4-6cm long Have at least 3 dorsal spines Known for their unique trait of Armor Plating

Armor Plating Bony Plating in place of scales Existence of the armor plating is dependent on if the fish are marine or freshwater dwellers Marine sticklebacks are typically fully-armored (about 30 bony plates) Freshwater sticklebacks are typically low-armored (about 10 bony plates) (Smith 2009)

Evolutionary Benefitsof Armor Loss When a stickleback gives up body armor, it gains agility and speed o More beneficial in an environment such as a lake o Freshwater environments lack an abundance diversity of predators compared to marine (Smith 2009)

Evolutionary Benefitsof Armor Loss Marine three-spined sticklebacks rely on their full armor plating to protect them from predators It is not uncommon for freshwater sticklebacks to have fewer spines because of the decreased amount of predators (Smith 2009).

Many sticklebacks are anadromous, and the low-armored individuals tend to survive more in the freshwater environments The rate at which this transition occurs is surprising and uncommon: the change can be seen in as little as 1-3 generations Life history

Review Amount of Lateral plate armor is heritable and under selection (Bell 2001) Major Locus o Ectodysplasin-Eda (Colosimo et al. 2005) Minor Loci o 5 o unnamed o Semi-Additive (Colosimo et al. 2005)

Review Continued Additional selection on Eda (Low Armor Allele) o Due to the correlation between decreased armor and increased growth rate  Differences between marine and freshwater sticklebacks (Barrett 2010) Flexible-Stem model of Evolution (Wund et al. 2008)

Model Organism: an extensively studied species used to help understand the biological processes of other species. quick generation time rapid evolution ability to adapt to new environments well studied Applications

Reverse Evolution: evolving back to a more primitive form resulting in a loss of diversity over time. o Involves the collapse of a phenotypically diverse population into a single form. (Kitano et al. 2008) Lake Washington

By the 1960s several Lake Michigan herring species had disappeared, most catches were of a single form. Lake Huron was dominated by 2 herring species in the past, recent data indicate they have become a single hybrid form. Seehausen 2006 The Great Lakes!

Humans are playing a huge role in the loss of fish biodiversity Turning natural systems into managed systems leading to homogenous environments o invasive species, overfishing, pollution By using the threespine stickleback to come to a better understanding of these processes we can promote new diversity and prevent future loss in species throughout the world Conservation Genetics

Future Work Speciation o Sexual Selection  Imprinted/Learned Behavior  Reproductive Isolation o Ecological Factors Model Generation

Future Work Sexual Imprinting o Learning mate choice early in life  Paternal Nest Gluing o Know it happens but not the mechanism o If tied to ecologically divergent traits, sexual isolation

Future Work Stickleback examples o Body Size  Foraging niche dependant o Nuptial Color  Adaptation to signaling and sensory systems in different light environments o Odor Difference  Diet difference, habitat, and immune system genes determined by local parasites Kozak, Head and Boughman 2011

Questions?