06 Life Histories 2010

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Transcript 06 Life Histories 2010

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Ch 11: Population Growth + Regulation
dN/dt = rN
dN/dt = rN(K-N)/K
BRING to
LECTURE:
1) PRINT of
Lecture Outline
2) Pg. 217-20 in
Manual
Ch 7: Life Histories and Evolution
Lifetime scheduling of resources and time to
maximize fitness…
Objectives
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Define life history
Explain how related to evolution
Resource allocation and tradeoffs
Correlated life history traits in contrasting
environments
Explain evolution of life history traits
Age of maturity
Fecundity
Parity (no. times reproduce/lifetime)
Aging and lifespan
A search for a set of rules when particular
traits affecting reproduction and survival
may be favored by natural selection.
Life history results from rules and choices
influencing survival and reproduction.
Growth
Longevity
Maturity
Parental care
Juvenile survival
Life histories vary along a slow-fast
continuum.
Traits are correlated in contrasting
environments.
• Slow (often large organisms)
• slow development
• delayed maturity
• low fecundity
• high parental investment/offspring
• low mortality
• long life
• Fast: opposite traits
Lack: life history in an evolutionary
context.
• As life history traits contribute to
reproductive success, they influence
evolutionary fitness.
• Life histories vary consistently with
environmental factors; hence may be
molded by natural selection.
Life history: schedule of organism’s life,
including:
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age at first reproduction (maturity)
number and size of offspring (fecundity)
number of reproductive events (parity)
aging (life span)
• The values of these traits are solutions to
the problem of allocating limited time and
resources among various structures,
physiological functions, and behaviors.
Resource Allocation
• Organisms face a problem of
allocation of scarce resources.
(compromise? or can organisms
increase overall performance
without trading off one function
against another?)
Alternative pathways for resource
allocation
Energy + matter
growth
increased
competitive
ability
reproduction maintenance
immediate
profit
increased
numbers
delayed
profit
reproduction
increased
survival
• Tradeoffs: Allocation of time, energy,
or materials devoted to one structure
or function cannot be allotted to
another.
• Costs: Allocation to current
reproduction involves tradeoff with
survival, growth, and future
reproduction.
*** Describe, then explain this tradeoff:
reproduction vs. mortality
What is the tradeoff between:
parental investment vs. parental survival?
Explain the law of ‘diminishing returns’:
trade-off between fecundity vs. survival
• Life histories balance trade-offs
between current reproduction and
future reproduction.
• Great variation among organisms in
resolving the fundamental tradeoff
between fecundity and adult growth
and survival.
• Principle: limited time and resources
are allocated among competing
functions so as to maximize lifetime
reproductive success.
Major life history traits
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Age of Maturity
Fecundity
Parity (# times reproduce)
Aging and lifespan
1) Age of Maturity
When should an organism begin to breed?
*** Summarize the major result.
What explains the pattern?
What determines age of maturity?
• Affects generation time and rate of entry
of genes into gene pool
• Benefit to not delay: immediate fecundity
• Benefit to delay: (if have relatively long
lifespan)
 may have age-related gains in
fecundity from growth or experience
• BUT cost to delay:
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May have risk of mortality with time
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May have reduced fecundity at later
ages
Explain: Optimal age at maturity
(i.e. maximize lifetime reproduction) varies
in direct proportion to longevity (lifespan).
e.g. determinate growth in a lizard: starts to
reproduce after reaches maximum size
2) Fecundity: How many offspring per
reproductive bout?
• Fecundity vs. parental
investment/offspring
•
seed size vs. seed number
•
egg size vs. egg number
• Great variation in seed and egg size
among species
Wide variation among organisms in life
history traits.
temperate
tropical
***Experimental test of hypothesis:
Number of eggs per clutch is limited by
food supply. Normal clutch size = 7.
Do the data support the hypothesis?
What type of selection
does this demonstrate?
a. Directional
b. Stabilizing
Is genetic variation being
maintained or reduced?
Explain: Adult lifespan determines optimal
allocation between growth and reproduction.
Fish A
Fish B
e.g. indeterminate growth in fish
(continue to grow throughout life;
fecundity directly related to body size)
Summarize all graphs in one sentence.
Explain this evolutionary shift in life histories.
(selection by predators on both adults and
young occurs)
Growth vs. Fecundity
• If indeterminate growth,
• Fecundity is related to body size;
• Increased fecundity in one year reduces
growth, and thus fecundity, in future.
• Short-lived emphasize fecundity over growth
• High extrinsic adult mortality rates favor increased
reproductive effort, or investment in offspring, at
expense of adult survival and future reproduction.
• Long-lived emphasize growth over fecundity
3) Parity
• How many times to reproduce per
lifetime?
• Semelparous
• (monocarpic) once
• Iteroparous
• (polycarpic) repeated
If semelparous, at what year to undergo
‘big-bang’ reproduction?
• Annual
• Biennial
• Long-lived
Semelparity: Hypothesis: When preparation
for reproduction is extremely costly?
Why is cicada:
Semelparous?
Synchronous?
• Semelparity: Hypotheses…
• When payoff for reproduction is highly
variable but favorable conditions are
predictable?
• When pollinators attracted to massive
display?
Iteroparity: When low current reproduction
results in maintaining high future
reproduction.
Perennials…
Repeated breeders…
4) Aging and Lifespan
• Senescence is a decline in
physiological function with age.
• Causes decline in fecundity and
survival
Strength of selection varies with mortality
rate. If high mortality, few reach old
agelittle selection for mechanisms to
prolong life.
Would green
or orange
have stronger
selection to
delay senescence?
Why does aging vary?
• Not all organisms senesce at same
rate, suggesting that aging may be
subject to natural selection and
evolutionary modification.
• Strength of selection diminishes on
traits expressed at progressively
later ages.