Lecture 18: Rates of Evolutionary Change - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 18: Rates of Evolutionary Change

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Title: Lecture 18: Rates of Evolutionary Change Author: Jean-Guy Godin Last modified by: Emily Herdman Created Date: 10/14/2003 12:28:41 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 18: Rates of Evolutionary Change


1
Lecture 18 Rates of Evolutionary Change
  • G. G. Simpson
  • Tempo Mode in Evolution (1944)
  • applied principles of modern synthesis
  • (e.g. population genetics) to fossil record
  • macroevolution microevolution writ large
  • Two ways to measure evolution ?

2
1) Phylogenetic Rate
  • Morphological Rate
  • rate of change of character or group of
    characters in a lineage
  • (anagenesis)
  • Rate Change/ Unit Time

3
Rates of Evolution of Single Characters
  • Haldane (1949)
  • darwin change in e / my
  • (ln x2 - ln x1 /change in t)
  • Transformation change (removes scaling
    effect)
  • e.g. 34 mm to 56 mm over 12 my
  • ln (34) 3.526 ln (56) 4.025
  • rate of change (4.025 - 3.526) / 12 0.042
    d

4
Evolution of Equine Lineage
5
Horse Teeth
6
McFadden (1992)
  • 408 specimens
  • 26 ancestor - descendent pairs
  • 4 characteristics of teeth
  • In general
  • pointy, narrow (leaf eater) ? wide, flat (grazer)
  • 26 X 4 104 estimates of evolutionary ?
  • 0.05 - 0.1 darwins
  • mainly positive, but also some reversals

7
Comparing Rates
  • ? in size of Ceratopsids 0.06 darwins
  • ? in skeletal dimensions of Passer domesticus
    after intro to N. Am. 50 - 300 darwins
  • artificial selection 60,000 darwins!
  • continuous fossil records show low rate masks
    frequent advances reversals
  • e.g. late Cenozoic mammals 12 darwins for short
    periods

8
Fluctuations in Rate
  • Gingerich rate of evolution ?1/ time measured
  • Short term fluctuations cancel out
  • e.g. beaks of Darwins finches
  • e.g. changes in radiolarian tests

9
Character Types
  • characters evolve at difft rates
  • (mosaic evolution)
  • rate of change is not constant
  • conservative characters canalized general
    adapns
  • derived characters specialized, rapid evoln

10
Rates of change population genetics
  • Given variance in character, estimate of
    heritability (hN2), ? in mean over t genns can
    estimate strength of directional selecn reqd
  • i.e. proportion of popn that fails to reproduce
    in order to produce observed changes
  • contrast weak, stabilizing selection, but pop.
    size small enough that drift will produce change

11
Horse Example
  • Assume (hN2) 0.5
  • 2 selective deaths / 106 individ / generation
    (selection)
  • population size of lt 104 individuals (drift)

12
2) Taxonomic Rate
  • replacement of forms
  • origination extinction (cladogenesis)
  • Quantified
  • ( taxa originate - taxa extinct) / unit time
  • Or the inverse of the average duration of a
    species

13
Cladogenesis Anagenesis
  • Speciation at t1 t2
  • a c contemporary
  • b goes extinct

14
Chronospecies
  • Problem
  • Fossil record taxonomy based on morpho
    characts.
  • Hard to separate anagenesis from cladogenesis
  • Identification of many chronospecies
  • Chronospecies descendent recognized as separate
    spp.

Taxonomic Pseudoextinction
15
?Phylogenetic Rate ?? Taxonomic Rate
  • rapid rate of morphological change leads to high
    rate of taxonomic replacement

16
? Taxonomic Rate ? ? Phylogenetic Rate
  • high rate of turnover little morphological change

17
  • Relationship b/w phylogenetic rate taxonomic
    rate depends on characters used to determine taxa
  • Comparison of taxonomic rates
  • balance of origination extinction
  • e.g. Bivalvia (Pelecypoda)
  • 17 genera appear in Ordovician
  • 4 survive to Triassic
  • average duration 78 my
  • compare to Carnivora 8 my

18
Living Fossils
  • oldest living species Triops cancriformis
    (tadpole shrimp)
  • unchanged since Triassic! (180 mya)

Cycad
Coelacanth
19
Recent Taxa
  • rapid evolution
  • poor fossil record
  • typical of Adaptive Radiations
  • Elaphus
  • Primelaphus Loxodonta
  • Mammuthus
  • 1 my (during Pliocene)

20
Problem of stasis
  • Fossil Deposits 50 - 100 my apart
  • short term changes are lost
  • However, observe
  • 1) long periods without change
  • 2) rapid appearance of new forms
  • 3) no transitional forms
  • Real or Artifact?

21
Quantum Evolution
  • Problem new taxa without fossil intermediaries
  • Simpson
  • rapid, substantial evolnary change with shift
    into new adaptive zones
  • once a threshold passed in acquisition of new
    adaptation, strong directional selection shapes
    feature into new forms
  • e.g. tarsus pulley in Artiodactyla rapid
    evoln diversificatn of deer, camels, antelopes

22
Hypotheses
  • 1) Phyletic Gradualism
  • constant anagenetic change
  • speciation gradual
  • transitional forms lost in fossil record
  • 2) Punctuated Equilibrium
  • stasis is real
  • evolution occurs during speciation
  • long-term trends in morphology due to spp. seln
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