Title: EVOLUTION, BIODIVERSITY, AND COMMUNITY PROCESSES
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2CHAPTER 5
- EVOLUTION, BIODIVERSITY, AND COMMUNITY PROCESSES
3Life and its Origins- types of organisms
- Biodiversity - Earths many types of life
- All organisms are either
- prokaryotic - single-celled organisms containing
no internal structures surrounded by membranes
(therefore there is no nucleus) Kingdom Monera
with bacteria and cyanobacteria - eukaryotic - all organisms consisting of cells
which contain membrane-bound nuclei
4Life and its Origins - types of organisms- 2
- Eukaryotic Kingdoms
- Protista - mostly one-celled organisms
- Fungi - organisms which decompose stuff
- Plantae - organisms which use photosynthesis to
make their own food - Animalia - organisms which must get organic
compounds from food they eat - most are
invertebrates others have vertebra
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6How did Life Emerge on Earth?
- Fossils - mineralized or petrified replicas of
structures formerly part of living organisms - Fossil record is incomplete but shows that The
evolution of life is linked to the physical and
chemical evolution of the earth - 4.7 - 4.8 billion years
- chemical evolution - formation of organic
molecules from which cells could form - biological evolution -1st prokaryotes then
eukaryotes
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8How did chemical evolution take place?
- Condensation of cosmic dust --gt molten interior
surrounded by thin, hardened crust - Water vapor released eventually condensed --gt
rain which eroded minerals - Primitive atmosphere probably contained
- carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen (N2), water vapor
with some methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3), hydrogen
sulfide (H2S) hydrogen chloride (HCl) - No Oxygen (O2)
9How did chemical evolution take place-2
- Energy-lightning, volcanoes, solar radiation
- Oparin - showed that inorganic molecules can
form organic molecules - Organic molecules from meteorites
- Organic molecules from hydrothermal vents
- Protocells may have formed in hot soup of many
types of organic molecules
10Evolution and Adaptation
- Biological evolution - change in a populations
(not an individuals) genetic makeup through
successive generations - Theory of evolution - descent from earlier,
ancestral species - Microevolution - small genetic changes within a
population (one species) - Macroevolution - large-scale changes among groups
of species
11Evolution and Adaptation -2
- Development of genetic variability
- Genes are DNA segments which code for specific
traits they are parts of chromosomes - Gene pool consists of all of the possible genes
(therefore all possible traits) of a population - Genes have alternative forms (alleles) all
individuals have different allele combinations
12Evolution and Adaptation - 3 Role of Mutation
- Mutations - random changes in DNA structure
caused by external agents or internal mistakes - Mutations occur in all cells mutations in
reproductive cells are passed on to offspring - Mutations may be harmless or are lethal
- Mutations - random and unpredictable
- Mutations - source of new genetic material
13Evolution and Adaptation - 4 Role of Natural
Selection
- Some individuals in population have genetically
based traits increasing chance of survival and
ability to produce offspring - Three necessary conditions
- natural variability
- heritable traits
- differential reproduction
- Process of microevolution Genes mutate,
individuals with adaptive traits are selected,
populations evolve
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15Peppered Moth example of natural selection
- Variability - light gray form was prevalent at
first dark gray form also existed - Color form was genetically based
- Environmental change (sooty trees) led to
differential reproduction light gray forms were
eaten by birds and didnt reproduce - Dark gray form became more prevalent - the
population had become genetically different
16Coevolution and Adaptation limits
- Changes in one species can lead to changes in an
interacting species - Animal predator/prey interactions
- Plant/herbivore interactions
- Adaptive trait must be present initially
- Reproductive capacity limits ability to adapt
- Organisms not having the adaptive trait would die
or not reproduce
17Evolution Misconceptions
- Survival of the fittest refers to reproductive
success - not a result of direct competition - A common ancestor had descendants - some of these
evolved into apes other descendents evolved into
human species - There is no plan or goal of perfection in the
evolutionary process
18Speciation, Extinction Biodiversity
- Speciation - two species arise from one
- Two phases of speciation
- geographic isolation - physical separation of two
groups of same population - 3 ways are. - reproductive isolation results in changes in
allele frequencies --gt divergence --gt inability
to interbreed and produce viable offspring --gt
one species has become two different species - Speciation may be rapid but usually is slow
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20Extinction
- Extinction of a species occurs when it ceases to
exist may follow environmental change - if the
species does not evolve - Evolution and extinction are affected by
- large scale movements of continents
- gradual climate changes due to continental drift
or orbit changes - rapid climate changes due to catastrophic events
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22Extinction - 2
- Background extinction - species disappear at a
low rate as local conditions change - Mass extinction - catastrophic, wide-spread
events --gt abrupt increase in extinction rate - Five mass extinctions in past 500 million years -
See Fig. 5-7 - Adaptive radiation - new species evolve during
recovery period following mass extinction
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24Biodiversity
- Biodiversity increases with speciation
- decreases with extinction
- Give-and-take between speciation and extinction
--gt changes in biodiversity - Extinction creates evolutionary opportunities for
adaptive radiation of surviving species - Human population resource consumption -gt massive
premature extinction
25Niches and Types of Species
- Ecological 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
26Niches and Types of Species - 2
- Habitat is location of species (its address)
- Niche is more - the species occupation
- Fundamental niche - fullest possible niche if no
competition from other species exists - Realized niche - part of fundamental niche
actually occupied - Understanding of species niches essential
27Niches and Types of Species - 3
- Generalist species have large niches tolerate
wide range of environmental variations these do
better during changing environmental conditions - Specialist species have narrow niches they are
more likely to become endangered these do better
under consistent environmental conditions
28Niches and Types of Species - 4
- Native species normally live and thrive in a
particular ecosystem - Nonnative species are introduced - can be called
exotic or alien - Indicator species serve as early warnings of
danger to ecosystem- birds amphibians - Keystone species are considered of most
importance in maintaining their ecosystem
29Species Interactions
- Species with similar activities or resource
requirements interact 5 types are - 1. Interspecific (between species) competition
- What are four possible competition outcomes?
- Which two are related to resource partitioning?
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32Species Interactions -2
- 2. Predation - What good (but not kind) effect
may result from predator-prey relationship? - 3. Parasitism
- parasite is usually smaller than host (prey)
- draws nourishment from and weakens host
- rarely kills host
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34Species Interactions -3
- 4. Mutualism - both interacting species benefit
for nutrition or protection more common when
resources are scarce as each species exploits the
other
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36Species Interactions -4
- 5. Commensalism - one interacting species is
benefitted the other is neither harmed nor
helped
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38Ecological Succession
- The gradual and fairly predictable change in
species composition of a given area - Complex sets of species colonize, proliferate and
then decline as time goes by - pioneer species --gt mid successional species
--gt late succession species
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40Ecological Succession - 2
- Primary succession- biotic communities are
gradually established in an area previously
devoid of living things - Give examples of primary succession
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42Ecological Succession - 3
- Secondary Succession - natural community of
organisms has been disturbed, removed or
destroyed - Give examples of secondary succession
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44Agriculture and Plantation forestry
- Agriculture favors use of monoculture - single
crop, usually early successional herbicides
limit competition - Plantation - single, fast-growing species rather
than diversity of relatively slow-growing species - Do climax communities exist? Would mature
community be better? Would biotic change
reflect unpredictability?
45Ecological Stability Sustainability
- Changing environmental conditions --gt positive
and negative feedback loops --gt constant dynamic
change --gt stability - Inertia - resistance to disturbance or alteration
- Constancy - ability to maintain constant size
related to available resources - Resilience - bounce back after external
disturbance
46Ecological Stability Sustainability
- What are 5 signs of ill health in stressed
ecosystems? - Time delays in negative feedback loops --gt slow
self correcting responses - Give examples of prolonged delays
- Synergistic interactions - two or more processes
interact so that combined effect is greater than
sum of separate effects
47Ecological Stability Sustainability
- How does species diversity relate to ecosystem
stability? - Old idea that more diversity more stability
- Necessarily true? Ecosystems must have producers
and decomposers (animals not necessary) - Compare rain forest - high diversity, high
inertia but poor resilience to grasslands
48MacArthur-Wilson island model
- Species equilibrium model or theory of island
biogeography - Number of species depends on balance between
immigration and extinction rates - Diversity is related to size of island what is
relationship? - Diversity is related to distance from mainland
what is relationship?
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