Title: Biodiversity
1Biodiversity
2How did Life Originate?
- A small pond?
- In hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean?
- In heat-stressed ponds near ancient volcanoes?
- In clay beds in estuary or bays?
3Early Speculation
- 1920s and 1930s
- A.I. Oparin and J.B.S. Haldane hypothesized about
the Earths early atmosphere. - Little free oxygen and abundance of methane,
ammonia, nitrogen, water vapor and perhaps free
hydrogen. - Earthquakes and lightening very common.
- Speculations not well-received due to lack of
evidence.
4Experiments Spontaneously Produced Organic
Compounds
- 1952 Miller and Urey built an apparatus to
model Oparins and Haldanes hypothesized
atmosphere. - After a week, amino acids were formed.
5Experiments Spontaneously Produced Organic
Compounds
- Other scientists repeated experiments and varied
the gas composition and other conditions. - Carbohydrates, lipids, components of RNA and DNA
and other amino acids were produced. - Astronomers commonly observed carbon-based
compounds throughout the universe
6Experiments Spontaneously Produced Organic
Compounds
- More recently, astronomers and geologists are
convinced Earths atmosphere was different than
Haldane and Oparin hypothesized. - Earth atmosphere was more likely composed of
carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water vapor. - Speculation continues.
7Next Step Was to Move Beyond Isolated
Carbon-Based Compounds to Cells
- Possible scenarios for producing proteins
- In ancient oceans, evaporation would concentrate
amino acids which would make them likely to
combine to form proteins. - Ocean bubbles would have powerful electrostatic
forces inside that would attract amino acids,
drawing them closer to interact. - Iron pyrite crystals and clay crystals could
attract and concentrate amino acids.
8Next Step Was to Move Beyond Isolated
Carbon-Based Compounds to Cells
- Possible scenarios for producing phospholipids
- Ancient bubbles made of phospholipids could
exist. - Would pop and allow mixing of chemicals contained
inside the bubble. - Ultimately result in the production of
protocells.
9Next Step Was to Move Beyond Isolated
Carbon-Based Compounds to Cells
- Protocells
- Non-living organism
- Important characteristic of life
- Ability to reproduce.
- 1993, scientists found small molecule of
synthetic RNA that could quickly make copies of
itself. - Current investigations are trying to determine
how life evolved on the Earth.
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11What Were the Major Milestones in the Earths
Evolving Biodiversity?
- Tendency to view organisms appearing later in
life as superior to those appearing earlier in
the history of the Earth. - Important to remember
- From a biological standpoint, complexity does not
equate success . - Success involves surviving and acquiring enough
energy and nutrients to reproduce and pass useful
characteristics to offspring.
12First Cells Evolved into the Different Cell Types
We See Today
- Earths first organisms
- Single-celled heterotrophs (lack an ability to
make food) - Consumed naturally occurring carbon-based
compounds - With exhaustion of compounds, heterotrophs
evolved single-celled and multicellular
decomposers, scavengers and predators.
13First Cells Evolved into the Different Cell Types
We See Today
- Autotrophs evolved from heterotrophs.
- Autotroph cells that produce chemicals that
store energy. - Trapped light-absorbing pigments that made it
possible to utilize energy from the sun. - Later these organisms evolved and were able to
photosynthesize.
14Simple Cells Evolved into More Complex Cells
- Eukaryotic cells evolved from prokaryotic cells.
- Two processes involved
- In-pocketing of cell membranes that specialized
and evolved into organelles. - Examples nucleus, Golgi complex, endoplasmic
reticulum - Endosymbiosis
- theory that mitochondria and chloroplasts were
prokaryotes that developed means to efficiently
obtain energy. - Mitochondria and chloroplasts intimately
associate with eukaryotic cell and become an
organelle in eukaryotic cells.
15Single-Celled Organisms Evolved into Multicelled
Organisms
- Multicelluarity evolved whenever some colonial
cells specialized. - Example concentrating on movement, food
digestion, reproduction. - As a result, other cells depend on specialized
cells for those functions.
16Milestones in Evolution of Animals
- Presence or absence of tissue
- The body type
- Symmetry, radial, or bilateral
- The number of embryonic germ layers
- Either two or three
17Milestones in Evolution of Animals
- Presence or absence of body cavities (coeloms).
- Bilateral animals fall into 3 categories
- No cavities acoelomates
- Cavity between mesoderm and endoderm
psuedocoelomates - Coeloms are surrounded by mesoderm coelomates
18Milestones in Evolution of Animals
- The embryonic timing of cell specialization among
the coelomates - Primitive coelomates cells commit early cell
specialization. - Advanced coelomates cells commit later in
embryonic development. - Location and method tissues develop.
- Primitive coelomates blastopore becomes the
mouth. - Advanced coelomates blastopore becomes the
anus.
19Milestones in Evolution of Animals
- Presence or absence of a skeleton, as well as the
type of skeleton. - Segmented worms have hydrostatic skeleton
- Shellfish and arthropods have exoskeleton
- Spiny-skinned animals and those with backbones
have endoskeleton
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21How Do Biologists Keep Track of So Many Species?
- Same problem exists in the grocery store.
- How to categorize different foods
- Biologist need to categorize more than 1.5
million species.
22Purposes of Biological Classification
- To assist in species identification.
- To assign formal, consistent scientific names to
species. - To describe ancestral relationships between
species.
23Initial Classification was Concerned With
Describing Natural Order
- Taxonomy began with Aristotle
- Classified groups using either-or comparison
- Example animal or plant
- Early days of classification, dominant
philosophical view - Species were fixed, unchanging and could be
arranged in natural order. - Species description sought to list each species
idealized characteristics. - Became the archetype.
24Karl von Linne
- 1707-1778
- Wrote meticulous detailed descriptions about
plants and animals. - Described over 8,000 plants and animals.
- Gave each two Latinized names.
- Unique to each
25Karl von Linne
- First name genus
- Closely related forms could share this name and
be grouped together. - Second name species
- Not shared by closely related forms.
- Called binomial nomenclature.
26Karl von Linne
- Generated higher taxonomic categories
- Related genera combined into Orders
- Related orders combined into Classes
- Highest categories were Kingdoms
- Two kinds Plant and Animal
27Classification after Darwin and Mendel
- Archetype replaced by type specimen.
- First specimen collected or a representative
specimen of the given species - Effect of Mendel
- Taxonomists shift to emphasizing the
characteristics that differentiate one distinct
population of species from another.
28Classification Today
- Primary objective today
- describe the evolutionary relationships between
species. - Use modern tools to describe relationships.
29Classification Today
- Molecular biochemistry allows scientists to
compare proteins, DNA and RNA from different
species. - More accurate for determining relationships than
relying upon comparisons of structure and form.
30How Does The System Work?
- Place organisms into a series of hierarchical
groups called taxa. - Broadest group contains most organisms
- These are subdivided into smaller categories
until level of individual species is reached. - All organism within a particular taxa share
certain characteristics.
31History of Classification
32At First Two Kingdoms, Now at Least Five
- From Aristotle to middle of 20th century
- Two kingdoms Plant and Animal
- There were exceptions such as fungi
- Sessile and had thick-walled cells like plants
- But were not photosynthetic
33Transitions
- Another exception
- Euglena
- One-celled organism with tail and no cell wall
- In the summer, had chloroplasts and would perform
photosynthesis - Winter would function as a decomposer
- Is it an animal or plant?
34Transitions
- Create more kingdoms to solve the problem.
- Protista would include Euglena and other similar
organism. - Monera would accommodate bacteria (single-celled
prokaryotes). - Additional new kingdom to accommodate Fungi.
35Transitions
- Recently a need to create category larger than
kingdoms, the domains. - Due to Archaea which are different than
prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
36Within Each Kingdom, There Are Additional
Categories
- Domain Eukarya
- All members have one characteristic in common
their cells are eukaryotes. - Much diversity in the kingdom.
- Requiring subdivision to classify organisms.
37Within Each Kingdom, There Are Additional
Categories
- Since kingdoms contain wide variety of organisms,
it becomes important to classify organisms into
sub-categories. - The taxa indicate evolutionary relationships.
38Domain Eukarya Has Four Kingdoms
- Protista
- single-celled and simple multicelled eukaryotes.
- Fungi
- single-celled and multicelled, eukaryotic,
heterotrophic organisms with thick-walled cells. - Plantae
- Multicellular, eukaryotic, autotrophic organisms
with thick-walled cells. - Animalia
- Multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic
organisms with cells that have no walls.
39What Is Happening to Earths Biodiversity?
- Life on Earth is disappearing
- Today only a fraction of the estimated 75 million
bison that greeted the first Europeans. - Songbird numbers are consistently down throughout
the world.
40Human Activities are Causing Mass Extinctions
- Root of the problem is human population growth.
- Resulting in competition for resources with other
species and humans usually win.
41Human Activities are Causing Mass Extinctions
- Size of human population results in
- Habitat loss
- 50 years ago, cities with 1 million people were
rare - Not true today.
- A need for more farmland.
- A need for various infrastructure such as
- Roads, railways, dams.
42Human Activities are Causing Mass Extinctions
- Chemicals produced by human activities and
released into the environment - Plastics, fuels, solvents, cleaning compounds
leak or are purposely put into soils, waterways,
or the atmosphere. - Adversely affecting reproductive rates of animals
and their populations.
43Human Activities are Causing Mass Extinctions
- Alien species
- Those that flourish in regions where they are not
native. - Introduced to new environments due to human
activities. - Replace native species and overwhelming local
resources.
44Humans Are Dependent on Healthy Populations of
Other Organisms
- Plants convert the carbon dioxide we produce into
oxygen we cannot live without. - Deforestation contributes to increased flooding.
- As human population increases, so does our waste.
- Wetlands can help with the decomposition of waste.
45Humans Are Dependent on Healthy Populations of
Other Organisms
- Penicllium
- a fungus that spoils fruit and bread also
produces a product that kills bacteria. - Yew trees
- Bark from this tree contains an extract that
helps control human cancers.
46We Can Preserve Our Biodiversity
- Human activities can be directed to building up
rather than tearing down our environment. - Preserve habitats by establishing parks and
refugees specifically for wildlife. - Restoration ecology goal is to transform spent
mines, worn-out farmland, deforested slopes and
even unprofitable shopping centers. - Most important to maintaining biodiversity is
citizen involvement.