Title: Biology 2900 Principles of Evolution and Systematics
1Biology 2900Principles of Evolutionand
Systematics
- Dr. David Innes
- Jennifer Gosse
- Valerie Power
2- Lecture Tues. Thurs 1030 - 1145 am
- IIC-2001
- Laboratory Mon Tues Wed Thr 200 - 500 pm
- SN-4110
- Labs. Week of January 7 11
- Organization of groups
- Group 1 Lab. Week of Jan. 14
- Download handout
- http//www.mun.ca/biology/dinnes/B2900/B29
00.html -
3Course Web Site
- http//www.mun.ca/biology/dinnes/B2900/B2900.htm
l - Course outline
- Lecture slides (pdf file)
- Lab. Information (new Lab. 1)
- Information, readings etc.
- Links to Evolution Web Page
- Midterm Test Thursday, Feb. 14, 2008
4Desire2Learn
- https//online.mun.ca/
- Login using MUN account
- 1. Course outline
- 2. Surveys i) student information
- ii) anonymous feedback
- 3. Internal email
- 4. online quizzes
5Goals
- Ask interesting questions about evolution
- Experiments and observations to answer ??
- Critically evaluate primary literature
- Contribute to the discussion of evolution between
specialists and public - Think like evolutionary biologists !!!!
6Evolution Thinking
- Why do organisms age and die ?
- What do fossils tell us about the evolutionary
history of plants and animals? - Why do some male spider sacrifice themselves
during mating?
7Example
Sex and death in the Australian red-back spider
Sexual cannibalism How could
evolution have produced a behavior that reduces
the chance of survival ? (Research of
Dr. Andrade, U. of T.)
male
male
8Experimental Results
- Cannibalized males copulated longer and
fertilized more eggs than those that survived
copulation - Females were more likely to reject subsequent
suitors after consuming their first mate - Empirical evidence for male copulatory
- suicide as an adaptive behavior
9Chapter 6 How to make love to a cannibal
Olivia Judson
10- Evolution
- a change in the properties of groups of
organisms over the course of generations (ie.
time) (Futuyma, 2005)
11- current life forms differ from those of previous
times and yet are descended from them - Descent with modification
12- The study of Evolution
- - how populations change in response to their
environment - - formation of new species
- The Study of Adaptation and Diversity
13- The Fact of Evolution
- - evidence from biology and geology
- - species have changed through time
- - descended with modification from common
ancestors
14- The Fact of Evolution
- Evidence
- 1. relatedness of life forms
- 2. change through time
- 3. age of the earth
15- Relatedness of life forms
Morphology homology (vert. limb
bones) Molecular conserved structure and function
Cytochrome c Cellular respiration 3D structure
based on amino acid sequence
Tuna fish
Rice
16Darwin
- One of the most revolutionary ideas in the
history of science - All organic beings which
- have ever lived on this earth
- have descended from some
- one primordial form
17The Fact of Evolution
- A scientific theory is a mature, coherent body
of interconnected statements, based on reasoning
and evidence, that explains a variety of
observations - The fact of evolution is explained by
evolutionary theory
Futuyma, 2005
18- The study of Evolution
- (Adaptation and Diversity)
- Where do living things come from ?
- Why are there so many different kinds of
organisms ? - How have organisms adapted so well to their
environment ?
19- Darwin (Origin of Species)
- Existing species are the modified descendants of
forms that existed previously - (descended from common ancestors)
- But how ? ?Natural Selection
- Theory by C. R. Darwin and A. R. Wallace
20Artificial Selection
- The mechanism of evolution under domestication
- 1. Phenotypic Variation
- 2. Variation heritable
- 3. Selective breeding (non-random
- survival and reproduction)
C. Darwin (1868) The variation of animals and
plants under domestication
21C. Darwin (1883) The variation of animals and
plants under
domestication
http//www.esp.org/books/darwin/variation/facsimil
e/title3.html
22Dogs
23Domestic Cats
24Pigeons
25Cabbage
Brassica oleracea
Wild Cabbage
Kale
26Natural Selection
- Darwin realized that a process much like
- artificial selection happens in
nature - Why did it take so long to realize a connection
between the power of artificial selection and the
potential of natural selection for evolution?
27Phenotypic Variation in Natural Populations
- Phenotypic Variation among individuals within a
wild species much more subtle
28Phenotypic Variation in Natural Populations
29Natural Selection
- The Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
- Evolution is the logical outcome of 4 postulates
30Evolution by Natural Selection
- 1. Individuals within populations variable (Lab
1) - 2. Some variations inherited by offspring
- 3. Some individuals more successful at surviving
and reproducing than others - 4. Survival and reproduction not random tied to
the variation among individuals
31- Individuals within populations variable
- - observed phenotypic variation
- 2. Some variations inherited by offspring
- - offspring resemble parents
(mechanism?)
Evolution by Natural Selection
32Evolution by Natural Selection
- 3. Some individuals more successful at surviving
and reproducing than others - - enormous reproductive potential
- Aphid ?
524 billion/yr - House fly ?
191 x 1018 in 5 months - Thomas Malthus' Essays on
Population - http//personal.clt.bellsouth.net/t/a/tarab
yl/malthus.htm
33Evolution by Natural Selection
- 4. Survival and reproduction not random tied to
the variation among individuals
Two phenotypes white, yellow
34Natural Selection
- If the 4 postulates true, then the composition of
the population changes from one generation to the
next - Natural Selection produces decent with
modification (Evolution)
35- Fitness
- Ability of an individual to survive and reproduce
in its environment - Adaptation
- Traits that increase fitness relative to
individuals without the traits
36Adaptation
- PBS Webpage
- http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/01/index
.html
Praying Mantis
Praying Mantis leaf mimic
37- Implications and consequences of NS
- -natural mechanism for evolution
- -descent from common ancestor ? order
- -natural classification ? hierarchical
- -all living things related ? phylogeny
- -humans evolved
- Darwin-Wallace Theory of NS testable
38- Can natural selection lead to evolutionary change
? - Model systems to test natural selection
- Galapagos Finches - P. R. Grant
39(No Transcript)
40Galapagos Islands
41- Galapagos Finches
- - 13 closely related species
- differ in beak morphology
- Variation associated with food eaten
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vv16aG5Ve0q0
42Geospiza fortis
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45- Test of 4 postulates
- Geospiza fortis on the island of
- Daphne major
- 1. Are populations variable ?
- 2. Variation heritable ?
- 3. Only some offspring live to reproduce ?
- 4. Survival and reproduction nonrandom ?
If 1, 2, 3, 4, true ? evolution by natural
selection
46- 1. Variation in Bill Depth
472. Heritability of Bill Depth
Fig 9.20
Offspring Bill Depth (mm)
1978 1976
VP VG VE H2 VG / VP 0.90
Midparent Bill Depth (mm)
48Seed abundance
Pop. Size
Large Hard
Seeds
3. Not all individuals survived. 4. Was survival
nonrandom with respect to bill size ?
Small Soft
1977 drought
49Before drought
After drought (survivors)
4. Survival nonrandom with respect to bill size.
Beak Depth (mm)
50Natural Selection
- 1. Large amount of variation in bill depth
(phenotypic) - 2. Much of variation heritable (genetic)
- 3. Drought resulted in decreased survival
- (due to change in food resource)
- - only some individuals survived to
reproduce - 4. Survival and reproduction non-random with
respect to bill - depth (birds with larger bills
favoured) -
Did the population evolve?
51Natural Selection
- Did the population
- evolve?
- Yes!!!
- Evolutionary change also evident in
parent-offspring regression
52Bill Depth Parent Offspring regression
Fig 9.20
1
1978 1976
Offspring Bill Depth (mm)
Midparent Bill Depth (mm)
53Natural Selection
- Large amount of variation in bill depth
(phenotypic) - Much of variation heritable (genetic)
- Drought resulted in decreased survival and
reproduction - (due to change in food resource)
- - only some individuals survived and
reproduced - Survival and reproduction non-random with
respect to bill - depth (birds with larger bills
favoured) -
54Natural Selection
- Finches with a larger, deeper bill had an
- advantage (directional selection)
- Drought resulted in only larger, harder seeds
- Wet years abundant small, soft seed
- smaller bills favoured
- Natural Selection is Dynamic
55Beak Size
Natural Selection Dynamic 30 years of data
Beak Shape
95 CI for 1973 data
Body Size
56- Features of Natural Selection
- 1. Acts on indiv., consequences in pop.
- 2. Evolution consists of changes in gene
frequencies
Gen. 1
Freq.
Gen. 2
Phenotype (ie. Size)
If Heritability 0
If Heritability gt 0
57- Features of Natural Selection
- 3. NS not forward looking
- 4. NS acts on existing traits
- 5. NS directed, not random
- 6. Fitness not circular (Survival of the
fittest) - 7. NS acts on individuals not groups
58- Features of Natural Selection
- Components of fitness
- - survival
- - reproduction
- More offspring produced than can survive
- (Potential for exponential population growth)
59Examples of Natural Selection
Fig. 13.3 Soapberry bug
60Examples of Natural Selection
Fig. 13.3 Soapberry bug
Native host plant
Introduced host plant
61Natural Selection
- molecular/morphological change over
- very short time intervals
- small changes
- can small changes over short time
- intervals lead to larger changes over
- longer time intervals ?
62- Changes
- Microevolution to Macroevolution
- Requires very long periods of time
63- Age of the Earth
- - about 4.6 billion years ago
- - first evidence of life 3.8 billion years ago
- - over long periods of time, small changes become
large
Fig. 3.12 60 year corn oil selection experiment
64- Origin of New Species?
- - Physical isolation (dispersal and colonization)
- - Divergent natural selection (diff.
environments) - Natural selection can explain - adaptation
-
- diversity
65- Problems that concerned Darwin
- 1. Source of variation ? mutation
- 2. Inheritance ? Mendel
- 3. Age of the earth ? radioisotopes
66- Modern Synthesis
- Synthesis of variability, inheritance and time
- 1932 - 1953
- - botany, systematics, population genetics,
paleontology
67Evolution by Natural Selection
- Complexity in nature
- - how random changes can lead to order ?
- - how can complex structures evolve through the
gradual accumulation of small changes ?
68- The Eye
- Evolution of a Complex Structure
-
- - each step had to increase fitness
- - are there diverse forms of eyes, some more
complex than others ?
69Mollusc Eyes
Pigment spot
Pigment cup
abalone
octopus
Marine snail
70Evolution of the eye
- http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/01/1/l_0
11_01.html
71Evolution by Natural Selection
- Observed diversity of life
- Organisms adapted to their environment
- The fact of evolution
- NS a mechanism for explaining
- observations
- Natural Selection in Humans ?