Biology 1B (Evolution) John...

26
Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeck

Transcript of Biology 1B (Evolution) John...

Page 1: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Biology 1B (Evolution)John Huelsenbeck

Page 2: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Alexander Fleming(1881–1955)

Page 3: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 4: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Pseudomonas aeruginosa(The greenish tint to the

bacterial lawn is caused by the bacteria itself)

Staphylococcus aureus(Bacterial lawn is yellow tinged. Note zone of inhibition by Oxacillin disk.)

Page 5: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Well-defined margin of inhibition around disk.

The small zone of inhibition around this Ceftriaxone disk is interpreted as resistance.

Page 6: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

71 (1880)

65 (1874)45 (1854)31 (1840)7 (1816)

Westminster Abbey

Page 7: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 8: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 9: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Marine Iguana

Land Iguana

Galapagos Tortoise

Page 10: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

A Darwin Finch

Page 11: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 12: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Chihuahua Great Dane Sheep Dog

WolfGolden Retriever

Page 13: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 14: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Biogeography: The study of the geographicdistribution of organisms.

A. Distribution of species (or kinds) on continents.

NewWorld

OldWorld

Observation: Greater similarity within acontinent than between continents, evenin comparison of similar habitats.

Page 15: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

Example: New world and old world monkeys

Platyrrhines (New World Monkeys)

• South America• Flat nosed, with nostrils having a wide septum.• 3 premolars

Catarrhines (Old World Monkeys)

• Europe, Africa, Asia• Hook-nosed, with nostrils closer together and pointing down.• 2 premolars

Cotton Top Tamarin Snow Monkey

Page 16: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations:

1. Oceanic islands have a low diversity of kinds (29 bird species on the Galapagos vs. >100 species on the Berkeley campus)2. There is a bias in the presence of certain kinds (e.g., Darwin’s Finches; 14 of the 21 endemic bird species on Galapagos are finches)3. The most similar kind to oceanic forms are found on the nearest continent.4. There is a bias in the types of species found on oceanic islands found: plants not found: amphibians insects fresh water fish birds mammals reptiles (some) reptiles (most)

Page 17: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

(a) (b)

Page 18: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 19: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 20: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 21: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 22: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 23: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

T3 -> T2

Page 24: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic
Page 25: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic

X1Hbox mutant

Page 26: Biology 1B (Evolution) John Huelsenbeckib.berkeley.edu/.../bio1b/evolutionfall13/pdfs/Huelsenbeck1-2slides.pdf · B. Island Biogeography, Darwin’s four observations: 1. Oceanic