Title: Characteristics of Ice Age evolution and adaptations
1Characteristics of Ice Age evolution and
adaptations
- Matt Williams
- Brian Prall
- Matt Lyerly
2Questions
- How do populations adapt to their niche during
climate changes? - What phenotypic changes were found in animals
that allowed for their population to survive and
prosper in Ice age conditions? - How did climate affect the survival of various
species?
3Definitions
- Refugium-a location of an isolated or relict
population of a once widespread animal or plant
species. - Younger Drias- also known as The Great Freeze
time from 12,900-11,500 years ago - Older Drias- 1000 years prior to Younger Drias.
4What causes an Ice Age?
- Milankovitch theory proposes that the process
is the orbital eccentricity of the earth around
the sun (Gribbin 1989) - Other factors such as tectonic movement and ocean
currents play an effect, but it is not yet
determined (Hewitt 1994)
5Climax of The Ice Age
6The Polar Front
7Factors of the Ice Age That Enhance Evolution
- Highly selective environments
- Change in overall geographic environments
- Division of existing populations by new
geographic barriers - New geographic areas/paths
- Induced founder effect on islands due to change
in the sea level
8Factors of the Ice Age That Enhance Evolution
9Factors of the Ice Age that Inhibit Evolution
- Short-term/reversible changes in the environment
may not be enough time for speciation - Each time the environment reverts from extreme
cold, selection would lower Ice Age suited
individuals - Migrations do not allow for genetic changes to
accumulate
10Flexible Adaptations and Examples
- Flexible adaptations features that allow for
individuals to survive in variable or varying
environments (Lister 2004) - Can be accomplished through
- Behavioral
- Broad-use adaptations
- Ecophenotypic plasticity (difference in
phenotypes that are the result of environmental
characteristics instead of gene expression)
11Ice Age Cod
- Ice Age Circulation Patterns
- Cod habitat range
- Genetic Analyses
12Ice Age Brown Bears
13Ice Age Brown Bears
- Researchers examined a series of
permafrost-preserved bear bones - Performed DNA sequencing and Phylogenetic
Analysis - Clades in East Beringian brown bears
- Climate Effects
14In-detail Example Red Deer
15In-detail Example Red Deer
- Red deer Cervus elaphus
- Broad-use adapation
- Mesodont teeth
- Allowed for deer to both graze for food from
grasses/low plants as well as consume soft leaves
from shrubs - Behavioral adapation
- Deer will seek food only when available
- Some eat sea-weed (only consumed during low tide)
16In-detail Example Red Deer
- Red deer Cervus elaphus
- Ecophenotypic plasticity
- Changes in the rumen (stomach) are found
- Deer that eat mostly grass have an open rumen
with small papillae (typical of other grazing
species) - Deer that mostly browse on leaves will develop
large, flat papillae (typical of other browsing
species) - Change develops in two to three weeks
17Additional Examples
- Domestic Swine
- If raised at 5oC, the animals develop
shorter/stockier legs and a thicker coat than
those swine raised at 30oC - Mice
- Mice that are raised in colder conditions will
grow shorter tails, than those in warmer
conditions, to prevent heatloss and frostbite
18Fitness by Distribution
- Some species increase their success by quickly
expanding their range as the Ice Age progresses - Many species also expand southward during an Ice
Age and Northward during periods of warming - This tends to create subspecies and less Genetic
diversity
19In-detail Meadow Grasshopper Chorthippus
parallelus
20Meadow Grasshopper Chorthippus parallelus
Hewitt (1996) Grasshopper movement based on DNA
data
21Chorthippus parallelus
- Durring periods of warming in the last ice age
many Populations including Chorthippu Parrallalus
spread through out Europe and Western Russia. - When the temperature in these areas began to
fluctuate the species was divided - Researchers used DNA to track the varying
sub-species origins. - The two events of the last ice age that caused
the greatest population decrease were the Younger
Dryas 12,800 to 11,500 and Older Dryas 1000 years
prior. -
22Expansion during cooler and warming periods
23Traits allowing for continued survival
24Further Research
- Exploring genetic relationship of birds
- Song cannot be fossilized, nor can coloration
- Determining relationship and survival of reptiles
during the ice age
25Results
- Some organisms had traits that allowed them to
survive, while other were not able to - Populations took advantage of expanding ranges,
leading to new populations and eventually
evolution - Climate change lead to less diversity among
certain species
26References
- http//www.dodo.blog.br/wp-content/uploads/2007/08
/ferahgo.jpg - hepokatti.net/nurmiheinasirkka.jpg
- www.quantum-conservation.org/ESB/Ursus20arct
- Bigg, G., Cunningham, C., Ottersen, G., Pogson,
G., Wadley, M., Williamson, P. 2008. Ice-age
survival of Atlantic cod agreement between
palaeoecology models and genetics. Pro. R. Soc.
275 163-173. - Hewitt, G. 1996. Some genetic consequences of ice
ages, and their role in divergence and
speciation. Biol. J. Linn. Soc. Lond. 58
247-276. - Leonard, J., Wayne, R., Cooper, A. 2000.
Population genetics of Ice Age brown bears.
Evolution. 97 1651-1654. - Lister, A. 2004. The impact of Quaternary Ice
Ages on Mammalian Evolution. Phil. Trans. R. Soc.
Lond. 359 221-241. - ORegan, H. 2008. The Iberian Peninsula
corridor or cul-de-sac? Mammalian faunal change
and possible routes of dispersal in the last 2
million years. Quat. Sci. Rev. 27 2136-2144 - Provan, J., Bennet, K. Phylogeographic insights
into cryptic glacial refugia. Trends Ecol. Evol.
23 565-571.