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Title: Outline


1
Outline
  • Introduction to Ecology
  • Evolution and Natural Selection
  • Physiological Ecology
  • Behavioural Ecology

2
Behavioural Ecology
3
Behavioural Ecology
  • The study of ecological and evolutionary
    processes that explain the occurrence and
    adaptive function of behaviour
  • Examples of potential questions
  • Why do birds migrate?
  • Why do grazing animals condense into herds?

4
Behaviour
  • Affects an individuals ability to survive and
    reproduce in a particular environment
  • Develops under the influence of both genetic
    inheritance and environmental experience
    (learning)
  • the genetic component of behaviour is subject to
    natural selection

5
Behaviour to maintain internal conditions
6
Behaviour to get food or prevent becoming food
7
Behaviour to reproduce
8
Plants manipulate behaviour
9
Outline
  • Reproduction Why have sex?
  • Life histories and mate choice
  • Predation
  • Optimal foraging
  • Applications to fisheries management

10
Outline
  • Reproduction Why have sex?
  • Life histories and mate choice
  • Predation
  • Optimal foraging
  • Applications to fisheries management

11
Why have sex?
Ch. 7.1-7.2, Bush
12
Outline
  • The basics of sex
  • The evolution of sex
  • Variations in sexual systems

13
Outline
  • The basics of sex
  • The evolution of sex
  • Variations in sexual systems

14
Reproduction
  • The goal of reproduction, for any organism, is to
    ensure the survival of its genetic lineage
  • Two ways to do this
  • ASEXUAL offspring are exact (almost) genetic
    copies of a single parent
  • SEXUAL chromosomes of two parents are segregated
    and recombined so that no two offspring are
    identical to each other or to either parent

15
Most organisms are sexual
  • Of the 1.8 million known species only 2000 of
    them are totally asexual

16
Asexuality is concentrated among the basal
organisms
17
Asexual reproduction
  • The cell divides to produce two daughter cells
  • This type of reproduction can be very rapid
    several generations can be produced each hour

18
Sex meiosis
  • Meiosis is the process whereby gametes are made
    with half the number of chromosomes
  • The original number of chromosome is reformed
    when two gametes come together

19
Meiosis versus mitosis
20
Outline
  • The basics of sex
  • The evolution of sex
  • Variations in sexual systems

21
Why did sex evolve?
  • Life originated without sex (as best we can tell)
    so sexual reproduction is something that had to
    evolve
  • There are a large number of disadvantages to
    sexual reproduction which makes the evolution of
    sex a conundrum

22
Sex is not necessary for all life
  • Some plants and animals have entirely abandoned
    sex
  • Others have sex only when its convenient and are
    asexual most of the time (facultatively sexual)

23
Sex in the news
24
Ancient asexuals Bdelloid rotifers
  • bdelloid rotifers date back 100 million years
  • Despite bdelloids' asexuality, they've
    diversified into 380 species

25
Facultative sexuality in animals
  • In some animals, such as Hydra, asexual
    reproduction can occur through budding
  • These animals are still capable of reproducing
    sexually as well
  • Sexual and asexual processes are governed by
    environmental conditions

26
Parthenogenesis offspring from unfertilized eggs
Cnemidophorus velox, a parthenogenic lizard
27
Aphids asexual and sexual
  • Females give birth to live females during the
    summer months
  • As winter approaches, both males and females are
    produced, which mate to produce eggs

28
The Cost of Sex
  • The cost of males
  • The cost of recombination
  • The cost of mating

29
The Cost of Males
30
Passing on genes is like tossing coins
  • Two copies exist for each gene
  • Whether you pass on a certain copy of a gene is
    an independent event for each child
  • If you have two children, sometimes you will pass
    on the same copy to both children (leaving the
    second copy passed on to neither child)

31
Fitness
  • FITNESS
  • the number of offspring an individual produces
    that survive to reproduce themselves
  • Fitness 1.0 means that individuals of this
    phenotype are successfully passing on 100 of
    their genes, on average

32
How is fitness calculated
  • Fitness the number of genes passed on to the
    next generation
  • Because diploid organisms (I.e., most organisms)
    only pass on half of their genes to each child,
    they must have two offspring living to
    reproductive age to have Fitness 1
  • Fitness 1 does not exactly mean that you have
    passed on 100 of your genes to the next
    generation (Remember sometimes you send two
    copies of the same gene and zero copies of the
    other)

33
Cost of recombination
  • Asexual Sexual
  • F F
  • F F F F M M
  • Fitness 2 1
  • of females

34
The Cost of Mating
  • Cost of sexual mechanisms
  • Chemical attractants
  • Sexual organs
  • Flowers
  • Cost of mating behaviour
  • Courtship is costly
  • Potential exposure to predators
  • Injury
  • Disease Transmission

35
Sexual Mechanisms
36
Mating Behaviour
37
Injury to females - unintentional
  • When males are much bigger than females, the
    females can be injured by intercourse

38
Injury to females - intentional!
Callosobruchus maculatus
Male genitalia
39
Why hurt the female?
  • Reducing the fitness of your mate ought to reduce
    the fitness of yourself as well
  • Copulation is not always a cooperative venture
    between the sexes.
  • In C. maculatus, females mate repeatedly
  • genital wounding could increase the fitness of
    male C. maculatus if
  • it causes females to postpone remating (less
    sperm competition)
  • increase immediate oviposition (egg-laying) rates
    because females perceive damage as a threat to
    survival and invest more in current reproduction

40
Costs of mating are widespread
  • Female Drosophila melanogaster that mate more
    often die more often
  • seminal fluid increases female death rate
  • Fluid is also responsible
  • in elevating the rate of female egg in elevating
    the rate of female egg-laying,
  • in reducing female receptivity to further matings
  • in removing or destroying sperm of previous mates

41
Birds, bees, and STDs
  • Most organisms are plagued by a few
    sexually-transmitted diseases
  • E.g., earwigs, frogs, koalas, or humans
  • Ustilago violacea (smut fungus) infects flowers
    of Silene alba and is transferred via pollinators

42
Sexuality must have its advantages
  • Hardly any asexual lineages seem old, and fossil
    evidence has suggested that asexuality is a dead
    end
  • The prevalence of sexuality amongst species is
    caused not because asexual species don't evolve,
    but because they don't last

43
Sex increases variation
44
Sex increases variation
  • Genes from maternal and paternal parent get
    shuffled up when gametes are made
  • Causes some gametes to have superfit genotypes
    and others to have superunfit genotypes

45
Sex leads to more variation in offspring
46
Sex and speed of evolution
  • More variation leads to natural selection
    operating faster
  • Most selection, however, is stabilizing
    selection, as individuals are well-adapted for a
    given environment and try to stay that way

47
Sex and speed of evolution
  • What aspect of the environment is so variable
    that the production of variable offspring could
    offset the cost of sex? - Parasites and
    pathogens
  • Hosts are constantly evolving to protect
    themselves from parasites and parasites are
    constantly evolving to overcome their hosts
    defenses
  • Parasites and hosts are locked in a host-parasite
    arms race

48
Red Queen Hypothesis
  • "Well in our country," said Alice, still panting
    a little. "you'd generally get to somewhere
    else-if you ran very fast for a longtime as weve
    been doing.
  • "A slow sort of county!" said the Queen. "Now,
    here, you see, it takes all the running you can
    do to keep in the same place."

49
Evidence for Red Queen Hypothesis
  • In top minnows, sexual and asexual lineages
    coexist
  • Sexual lineages are the least susceptible to
    parasites
  • Genetic variation needed to keep up with
    evolution of parasites

50
Mullers Ratchet
  • Vast majority of mutations are detrimental
  • Mutation acquisition is a one-way process in the
    genomes of asexuals
  • In Salmonella typhimurium 444 lineages started
    from a single colony
  • After 1700 generations, 1 of lineages showed
    decrease in fitness (growth rate) but no lineages
    showed increased fitness

51
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52
Outline
  • The basics of sex
  • The evolution of sex
  • Variations in sexual systems

53
Variations in the sexual theme
  • Are there always two separate sexes?
  • Do females always have the offspring?
  • Do females control who fathers their offspring?

54
Sexual systems
  • Depends on the sexual system of the organism
  • Hermaphroditic
  • Dioecious (Latin for two houses)

55
Flowering plants
  • Wide diversity of sexual systems ranging from
    strict hermaphroditism to dioecy
  • Hermaphroditism is the most common (90 of all
    flowering plants)

56
Hermaphroditic animals
57
Snail copulation
  • Copulation involves a two- to six-hour marathon
    that is actually an exchange of sperm between two
    individuals, combined with plenty of rubbing,
    biting and "eye-stalk" waving
  • shoot centimetre-long darts out of their bodies
    and into the genital area of the other (which
    happens to be just behind the head on the right
    side).

58
Helix aspersa
59
Why only two sexes at most?
  • If we describe the individuals that have the
    offspring as females, then the other sex is male
  • If we introduce another sex that also does not
    have offspring (i.e., males) then we increase the
    cost of males
  • a higher cost of males would be maladaptive

60
Seahorse anatomy
61
Mating and Males Giving Birth
62
Sperm storage in female insects
Many female insects have the ability to store
sperm from many males, only choosing the best to
fertilize her eggs when the reproductive season
is over
63
Male Drosophila flies
  • Drosophila flies have sperm cells that are up to
    6 centimetres long!
  • Their testes take up 11 of their body mass

Male Drosophila bifurca
64
Summary
  • Considering the short-term advantages of
    asexuality, it is not entirely clear why so many
    organisms are sexual
  • Although the exact reason why sex is advantageous
    has not been determined, the increase in
    variation that sex brings is thought to play a
    large part
  • A wide variety of variations in sexuality have
    evolved in terms of the separation of sexes, the
    placement of parental care, and the timing of
    sexuality

65
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