Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Evolution and Biodiversity

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Evolution and Biodiversity"— Presentation transcript:

1 Evolution and Biodiversity
Miller Chapter 5

2 Earth: The Just Right Planet
Temperature Distance from Sun Geothermal energy from core Temperature fluctuated only 10-20oC over 3.7 billion years despite 30-40% increase in solar output Water exists in 3 phases Right size (=gravitational mass to keep atmosphere) Resilient and adaptive orbit around sun: leads to seasonal patterns

3 Origins of Life on Earth 4.7-4.8 Billion Year History
Evidence from chemical analysis and measurements of radioactive elements in primitive rocks and fossils. Life developed over two main phases: Chemical evolution (took about 1 billion years) Organic molecules, proteins, polymers, and chemical reactions to form first “protocells” Biological evolution (3.7 billion years) From single celled prokaryotic bacteria to eukaryotic creatures to eukaryotic multicellular organisms (diversification of species)

4 Summary of Evolution of Life
Formation of the earth’s early crust and atmosphere Small organic molecules form in the seas Large (biopolymers) First protocells Single-cell prokaryotes eukaryotes Variety of multicellular organisms form, first in the seas and later on land Chemical Evolution (1 billion years) Biological Evolution (3.7 billion years)

5 Biological Evolution Fossils present but rare Evolution and expansion of life Fossils become abundant Plants invade the land Age of reptiles Age of mammals Insects and amphibians invade the land Modern humans (Homo sapiens) appear about 2 seconds before midnight Recorded human history begins 1/4 second before midnight Origin of life (3.6–3.8 billion years ago)

6 Fossil Record Most of what we know of the history of life on earth comes from fossils Give us physical evidence of organisms Show us internal structure Uneven and incomplete record of species We have fossils for 1% of species believed to have lived on earth Some organisms left no fossils, others decomposed, others have yet to be found. Other info from ancient rocks, ice core, DNA

7 Evolution Microevolution Macroevolution
The change in a POPULATION’S genetic makeup (gene pool) over time (successive generations) Those with the best phenotype and genotype survive to reproduce and pass on traits 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 are lost through extinction

8 Microevolution four processes drive microevolution:
gene flow: the movement of genes between populations; genetic drift: change in genetic composition that results by chance, especially in small populations. mutation: random changes in the structure of DNA molecules that serve as the ultimate source of genetic variation; natural selection: the process by which some individuals of a population have genetically based characteristics that cause them to survive & produce more offspring than other individuals;

9 Natural Selection When individuals in a population have certain genetic traits that enhance their ability to survive and pass on these advantageous traits to their offspring. Adaptation- heritable trait that enables the organisms to better survive under environmental conditions. When faced with changing environmental conditions a species will either: 1) adapt through natural selection 2) migrate to areas with more favorable conditions 3) become extinct!

10 Darwinian Natural Selection
Three conditions necessary for evolution by natural selection to occur: Natural variability for a trait in a population Trait must be heritable (has a genetic basis so that it can be passed onto offspring) Trait must lead to differential reproduction Must allow some members of the population to leave more offspring than other members of the population w/o trait) A heritable trait that enables organisms to survive is called an adaptation

11 Steps of Evolution Genetic variation is added to genotype by mutation
Mutations lead to changes in the phenotype Phenotype is acted upon by nat’l selection Individuals more suited to environment produce more offspring (contribute more to total gene pool of population) Population’s gene pool changes over time Speciation may occur if geographic and reproductive isolating mechanisms exist…

12 Take Home #1 When faced with a change in environmental condition, a population of a species can: Adapt via natural selection Migrate (if possible) to an area with more favorable conditions (Mars & Atlantis?) Become extinct Natural selection can only act on inherited alleles already present in the population—do not think that the environment creates favorable heritable characteristics!

13

14 Three types of Natural Selection
Directional Allele frequencies shift to favor individuals at one extreme of the normal range Only one side of the distribution reproduce Population looks different over time Peppered moths and genetic resistance to pesticides among insects and antibiotics in bacteria Stabilizing Favors individuals with an average genetic makeup Only the middle reproduce Population looks more similar over time (elim. extremes) Diversifying Environmental conditions favor individuals at both ends of the genetic spectrum Population split into two groups

15 1. Directional Selection
Directional selection favors individuals with traits that are at one end of a distribution (such as the peppered moth example). "It pays to be different."

16 Directional Change in the Range of Variation
Directional Selection Shift in allele frequency in a consistent direction Phenotypic Variation in a population of butterflies

17 The Case of the Peppered Moths
Industrial revolution Pollution darkened tree trunks Camouflage of moths increases survival from predators Directional selection -shift away from light-gray towards dark-gray moths

18 2. Stabilizing Selection
Stabilizing selection eliminates individuals at both in of the spectrum of variation; the average remains the same. "It pays to be average."

19 Selection Against or in Favor of Extreme Phenotypes
Stabilizing Selection Intermediate forms of a trait are favored Alleles that specify extreme forms are eliminated from a population

20 3. Diversifying Selection
Diversifying selection eliminates average individuals, but favors individuals at either extreme of the spectrum of variation. "It doesn't pay to be normal."

21 Selection Against or in Favor of Extreme Phenotypes
Disruptive Selection Both forms at extreme ends are favored Intermediate forms are eliminated Bill size in African finches

22 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 between interacting populations of different populations Can also be symbiotic coevolution Angiosperms and insects (pollinators) Corals and zooxanthellae Rhizobium bacteria and legume root nodules

23 Coevolution examples:
flowering plants & their pollinators; flowers attract pollinators & provide "reward" for food in the form of nectar or pollen; pollinators perform "service" of moving pollen between flowers; plants with defenses against herbivores (thorns, camouflage, toxins) & the herbivores’ ability to deal with plants’ defenses.

24 the species’ occupation and its
Niche is the species’ occupation and its Habitat location of species (its address)

25 Niche A species’ functional role in its ecosystem; includes anything affecting species survival and reproduction Range of tolerance for various physical and chemical conditions Types of resources used Interactions with living and nonliving components of ecosystems Role played in flow of energy and matter cycling

26 Niche Fundamental niche: the full potential range of physical, chemical, and biological conditions and resources a species could theoretically use Realized niche: to survive and avoid competition, a species usually occupies only part of its fundamental niche

27 Niche Overlap separation Number of individuals Generalist species
Region of niche overlap Generalist species with a broad niche with a narrow niche Niche breadth separation Number of individuals Resource use

28 Avocet sweeps bill through mud and surface water in
search of small crustaceans, insects, and seeds Ruddy turnstone searches under shells and pebbles for small invertebrates Herring gull is a tireless scavenger Brown pelican dives for fish, which it locates from the air Dowitcher probes deeply into mud in search of snails, marine worms, and small crustaceans Black skimmer seizes small fish at water surface Louisiana heron wades into water to seize small fish Figure 4.8 Natural capital: specialized feeding niches of various bird species in a coastal wetland. Such resource partitioning reduces competition and allows sharing of limited resources. Piping plover feeds on insects and tiny crustaceans on sandy beaches Oystercatcher feeds on clams, mussels, and other shellfish into which it pries its narrow beak Flamingo feeds on minute organisms in mud Scaup and other diving ducks feed on mollusks, crustaceans,and aquatic vegetation Knot (a sandpiper) picks up worms and small crustaceans left by receding tide (Birds not drawn to scale)

29 Generalist and Specialist Species: Broad and Narrow Niches
Generalist species tolerate a wide range of conditions. Specialist species can only tolerate a narrow range of conditions.

30 r and k strategists Depending upon the characteristics of the organism, organisms will follow a biotic potential or carrying capacity type reproductive strategy The r-strategists High biotic potential – reproduce very fast Are adapted to live in a variable climate Produce many small, quickly maturing offspring = early reproductive maturity “Opportunistic” organisms The K-strategists Adaptations allow them to maintain population values around the carrying capacity They live long lives Reproduce late Produce few, large, offspring

31 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

32 Speciation example Reproductive Isolation

33 The Case of the Road-Killed Snails
Study of neighboring populations of snails Genetic variation is greater between populations living on opposite sides of the street Color - 3 alleles of a gene

34 Speciation Geographic isolation can lead to reproductive isolation, divergence, and speciation.

35 Geographic Isolation …can lead to reproductive isolation, divergence of gene pools and speciation. Figure 4-10

36 Adaptive Radiation Adaptive radiation involves splitting of a lineage to form many species with different ecological niches. The adaptive radiation of mammals began about 65 million years ago.

37 Evolutionary Divergence
Each species has a beak specialized to take advantage of certain types of food resource.

38

39 Extinction 99.9% of all species that ever existed are now extinct.
Background extinction- species disappear at a low rate Mass extinction and mass depletion Background vs. Mass Extinction Low rate vs % 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

40 Extinction in the context of Evolution
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 All members of the unlucky species may die

41 Human Activities are Decreasing Biodiversity
Richest areas of biodiversity- tropical forests, coral reefs, and wetlands

42 Biodiversity Speciation – Extinction=Biodiversity
Humans major force in the premature extinction of species. Extinction rate increased by times the natural background rate. As we grow in population over next 50 years, we are expected to take over more of the earth’s surface and productivity. This may cause the premature extinction of up to a QUARTER of the earth’s current species and constitute a SIXTH mass extinction Genetic engineering won’t solve this problem Only takes existing genes and moves them around Know why this is so important and what we are losing as it disappears….

43 Extinction: Lights Out
Extinction occurs when the population cannot adapt to changing environmental conditions. The golden toad of Costa Rica’s Monteverde cloud forest has become extinct because of changes in climate.

44 Species and families experiencing mass extinction
Bar width represents relative number of living species Millions of years ago Era Period Extinction Current extinction crisis caused by human activities. Many species are expected to become extinct within the next 50–100 years. Quaternary Today Cenozoic Tertiary Extinction 65 Cretaceous: up to 80% of ruling reptiles (dinosaurs); many marine species including many foraminiferans and mollusks. Cretaceous Mesozoic Jurassic Extinction Triassic: 35% of animal families, including many reptiles and marine mollusks. 180 Triassic Extinction Permian: 90% of animal families, including over 95% of marine species; many trees, amphibians, most bryozoans and brachiopods, all trilobites. 250 Permian Carboniferous Extinction 345 Figure 4.12 Fossils and radioactive dating indicate that five major mass extinctions (indicated by arrows) have taken place over the past 500 million years. Mass extinctions leave many organism roles (niches) unoccupied and create new niches. Each mass extinction has been followed by periods of recovery (represented by the wedge shapes) called adaptive radiations. During these periods, which last 10 million years or longer, new species evolve to fill new or vacated niches. Many scientists say that we are now in the midst of a sixth mass extinction, caused primarily by human activities. Devonian: 30% of animal families, including agnathan and placoderm fishes and many trilobites. Devonian Paleozoic Silurian Ordovician Extinction 500 Ordovician: 50% of animal families, including many trilobites. Cambrian

45 Date of the Extinction Event Marine vertebrates and invertebrates
Mass Extinctions Date of the Extinction Event Percent Species Lost Species Affected 65 mya (million years ago) 85 Dinosaurs, plants (except ferns and seed bearing plants), marine vertebrates and invertebrates. Most mammals, birds, turtles, crocodiles, lizards, snakes, and amphibians were unaffected. 213 mya 44 Marine vertebrates and invertebrates 248 mya 75-95 380 mya 70 Marine invertebrates 450 mya 50

46 GEOLOGIC PROCESSES, CLIMATE CHANGE, CATASTROPHES, AND EVOLUTION
The movement of solid (tectonic) plates making up the earth’s surface, volcanic eruptions, and earthquakes can wipe out existing species and help form new ones. The locations of continents and oceanic basins influence climate. The movement of continents have allowed species to move.

47 Continental Drift Continental drift, slow movement of continents, has played a major role in both speciation and extinction.

48 Climate Change and Natural Selection
Changes in climate throughout the earth’s history have shifted where plants and animals can live. Figure 4-6

49 Catastrophes and Natural Selection
Asteroids and meteorites hitting the earth and upheavals of the earth from geologic processes have wiped out large numbers of species and created evolutionary opportunities by natural selection of new species.

50 SPOTLIGHT Cockroaches: Nature’s Ultimate Survivors
350 million years old 3,500 different species Ultimate generalist Can eat almost anything. Can live and breed almost anywhere. Can withstand massive radiation.


Download ppt "Evolution and Biodiversity"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google