1 Evolution and Ecology. 2 The Voyage of the Beagle (1845)

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3 It is probable that the islands of the Cape de Verde group resemble, in all their physical conditions, far more closely the Galapagos Islands…

Transcript of 1 Evolution and Ecology. 2 The Voyage of the Beagle (1845)

1 Evolution and Ecology 2 The Voyage of the Beagle (1845) 3 It is probable that the islands of the Cape de Verde group resemble, in all their physical conditions, far more closely the Galapagos Islands 4 yet the aboriginal inhabitants of the two groups are totally unlike; those of the Cape de Verde Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as the inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped with that of America. 5 Natural Diversity By the Numbers Estimated million species, with a best estimate of somewhere near 10 million ~1.4 million described species ~1 million described insects/ 350,000 described beetles 8,80010,200 living bird species ~5,500 species of mammals Great diversity exists, with each species exhibiting a considerable degree of suitability for its natural lifestyle How? Seems unlikely 6 Evolution Disclaimer Whether you choose to accept that evolution is the means by which existing species diversity developed or not, you are responsible for learning and applying the principles in this course. In short: This course is taught from the evolutionary paradigm. 7 What do scientists do? Explain PREDICT! Need a theory to make predictions. 8 Other major scientific theories. Cell theory 1839 Plate tectonic theory not fully accepted until late 1960s General relativity (i.e. gravitational theory) proposed by Einstein in 1915/16. Gravitational waves are a requirement of the theory of general relativity, but have never been directly detected Gravitational waves have been generally been accepted to exist since 1980s. Chemistry Valence bond theory and molecular orbital theory Competing theories in the 1930s. Now somewhat combined also the advent of quantum chemistry. 9 What is evolution? Broad: The gradual process by which the living world has been developing following the origin of life. Narrow: Change in the genetic frequencies of a population. 10 What Evolution Is? By Ernst Mayr Evolution is the most important concept in biology. There is not a single Why? question in biology that can answered adequately without a consideration of evolution. Again need theory for explanation and prediction. 11 Why is the theory of evolution important? Implications for people: Antibiotic resistance, pesticide resistance, control of disease, human epidemiology, development of new crops, medical treatments, conservation biology, etc. (not to mention the ecological implications) Evolution provides the mechanism to address these issues. 12 Historical Background: Early contributors Lamark (1809): Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics (learning; meme vs. gene) Darwin: Theory of Evolution (Origin of Species 1859) 5 theories really. Malthus: potential usually exceeds realized reproduction for populations (including humans) Wallace: independent conceptualization of Natural Selection Mendel: Genetics = currency of evolution 13 Historical Background: Biological issues In 17 th Century and prior: Natural history Segregated into zoology and botany Medicine Segregated into anatomy, physiology, surgery, and clinical medicine. Evolution and genetics unified all these disciplines. 14 Darwins Five Theories 1 The non-constancy of species The idea of a changing world can be considered the fact of evolution. 2 The descent of all organisms from common ancestors 3 Gradualism (no saltations, no discontinuities) 4 Speciation by populations 5 Natural selection This is the theory of the process of evolution. Historical Background 15 Darwins Five Theories The non-constancy of species & common ancestors Quickly accepted Gradualism, speciation and natural selection. Not completely accepted until 1940s Historical Background 16 Fossil Record Morphology Vestigial organs Biogeography Molecular evidence Evidence for evolution 17 Evidence for evolution: Fossil record 18 Jaw bone evolution from therapsid reptiles to mammals. Evidence for evolution: Fossil record 19 Evolution through time: Variation through geologic periods. Fossils in most recent strata are often similar if not indistinguishable from living species. The older the strata is, the more different the fossils. Evidence for evolution: Fossil record 20 Evidence for evolution Morphology: This was how species were described as related as far back as 18 th century. Linnaean hierarchy: From Kingdom to sub-species 21 Evidence for evolution Vestigial Structures: Structures that are not fully functional or functional at all. 22 Vestigial Structures Blind cave dwelling animals still have eyes (that dont work). Why does an ostrich have wings? Evidence for evolution 23 Evidence for evolution: Biogeography Biogeography: the geographic distribution of organisms those [organisms] of the Cape de Verde Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as the inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped with that of America. 24 Evidence for evolution: Biogeography Evolution through space: 25 Gondwana 26 Evidence for evolution Molecular evidence the more closely related two organisms are, the more similar are their genetic structure. Often times, morphological traits can be ambiguous. One of the most important sources of information on phylogenetic relationships 27 Mendelian genetics Gregor Mendel: 1822 1884 What did Mendel do? Example: Green and yellow peas Mendelian genetics was originally used to dispute one of Darwins theories. 28 Maintaining Genetic Variation See appendix. Without Selection: no loss or gain (random) B. Hardy-Weinberg Theorem: constant allelic frequencies are maintained if... populations are large, individuals contribute equally to genetic composition of next generation, and matings are random Remember: Narrow definition of evolution = change in the genetic frequency of a population. 29 Why does this matter? If population is not at equilibrium There are outside forces acting on the population. 30 Outside forces that can change population genetics. Mutations origin of variations, and mutation increases under stress Age, chemicals, UV-radiation Migration Population size Non-Random Mating Nonrandom Mating: gene frequencies Environmental Variance: favor some phenotypes Effects of Selection: stable polymorphisms Natural Selection 31 Loss of Genetic Variation Inbreeding: rapid loss of genes Fixes traits quickly Genetic Drift: random losses of genes Neighborhoods: local breeding tendency Races of plants and animals Bottlenecks: low population = reduced pool, duration of the low population is critical (drift) 32 Survivors of a near-extinction resulted in close inbreeding 10,000 years ago. 33 Current Evolution According to narrow definition: Evolution is little more than a process that changes gene frequencies in a non-random manner; environmental influences direct this change What are a few examples of recent evolution of species that can be correlated to an environmental stress? 34 Examples The evolution of pesticide resistence in pest species The evolution of antibiotic resistence in human pathogens note the recent discovery of plague and tuberculosis exhibiting broad-spectrum antibiotic resistence 35 Insect species resistant to pesticides 36 Strep resistance to penicillin 37 Maintenance of variation So how is variation maintained in the face of environmental pressures and natural selection? Ever see a constant environment? Microenvironmental differences exist over small spatial scales. Temporal heterogeneity is a common characteristic of physical environments. 38 Evolutionary Ecology Fusion of ecology and evolutionary theory. Sometimes two terms used as different time scales. An observed relationship may be explained by: functional, proximate or ecological means. Or ultimate, evolutionary terms. Historically, ecologists assumed many phenomena are immutable: Sex ratios (always 50:50), generalist vs. specialist feeding preferences, migration, number of offspring. An evolutionary perspectives recognizes these phenomena change through time and in response to the environment. 39 Evolution is a primary factor in determining the distribution and abundance of organisms. A relatively new field (last 25 year). Thus not adequately addressed in most text books. Evolutionary Ecology 40 There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed laws of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved. Charles Darwin The Origin of Species (Last sentence)