Understanding Our Environment - McGraw Hill Higher Education
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Transcript Understanding Our Environment - McGraw Hill Higher Education
Evolution and Ecology
Chapter 2
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Outline
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Darwin
Theory of Natural Selection
Finch Beaks
Clusters of Species
Drosophila - Cichlids - Buttercups
Ecology
Patterns of Population Growth
Life History Strategies
Human Populations
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Darwin and the HMS Beagle
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1831 - 22 year old Charles Darwin was
selected to serve as naturalist on a five-year
mapping expedition around the coast of
South America.
Observed series of related but distinct
forms of life on Galapagos Islands near
Ecuador.
- Formed an explanation that natural
selection drives evolution.
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Darwin’s Evidence
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At the time, common belief was that the earth
was only a few thousand years old.
Darwin was, at first, fully convinced species
were immutable.
During the voyage, he became intrigued
that plants and animals on the young
volcanic islands resembled those on
nearby South American coast.
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The Theory of Natural Selection
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Darwin studied Thomas Malthus who pointed
out populations of plants and animals tend to
increase geometrically.
Unchecked reproduction should spiral out
of control.
Darwin was also aware of variation and
artificial selection in domesticated animals.
Proposed such selection could occur in
nature (Natural Selection).
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
The Theory of Natural Selection
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Darwin drafted a manuscript in 1842, but
shelved it until 1858 when he received a
similar manuscript from Alfred Wallace.
Origin of Species published in 1859.
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Finch Beaks
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Darwin collected 31 finch specimens from
three islands in 1835.
Ornithologist John Gould determined they
were a closely related group of distinct
species, all similar except for their bills.
- Correspondence was found between the
beaks and the food source of each
specimen, leading Darwin to conclude
the beaks had been shaped by
evolution.
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Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Clusters of Species
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Adaptive Radiation - Process producing a
cluster of species, occupying a series of
similar habitats, all evolving from a recent
ancestor.
Galapagos finches comprise four groups:
Ground finches
Tree finches
Warbler finch
Vegetarian finch
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Hawaiian Drosophila
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At least 1,250 species of Drosophila in the
world; more than a quarter found only in the
Hawaiian islands.
Native Hawaiian flies are closely
associated with native plants.
- When ancestors first reached the
islands, they probably encountered
many empty niches, thus facilitating
diversification and speciation.
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Lake Victoria Cichlid Fishes
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Lake Victoria was home to a cluster of over
200 cichlid species.
Researches estimate first cichlid entered
the lake 200,000 years ago from the Nile.
- Many species probably originated as the
lake dried down 14,000 years ago,
isolating populations.
Diversity reduced due to competition
from exotic species.
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
New Zealand Alpine Buttercups
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More species of Alpine Buttercups
(Ranunculus) grow on two islands of New
Zealand than all of North and South America
combined.
Research found evolutionary mechanisms
behind high diversity is recurrent isolation
associated with recession of glaciers.
- Repeated invasion with glaciation
followed by isolation.
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Ecology
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Earnst Haekel (1866) - Study of how
organisms interact with their environment.
Populations - Individuals of the same
species living together.
Communities - Populations of different
species living and interacting.
Ecosystems - A collection of communities
and associated non-living factors.
Biomes - Major distinct terrestrial
assemblages that occur over a wide area.
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Biomes
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Ecosystems
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Almost all energy flowing through
ecosystems ultimately comes from the sun.
Sun - Plants - Herbivores - Carnivores
- Food Chain
Useful energy is lost at each step,
severely limiting the number of steps
in a food chain.
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Patterns of Population Growth
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Innate Capacity for Increase - Rate a
population grows in the absence of limits.
Realized Rate of Population Increase (r) Number of individuals added to the
population minus the number lost.
r = (birth + immigration) - (death + emigration)
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Exponential Growth
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To determine population growth rate, r must
be adjusted for population size
Population Growth rate = r N
- r = realized rate of population growth
- N = number of individuals in population
Exponential Growth
Rapid at first, but slows down as resources
become exhausted.
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Carrying Capacity
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Carrying Capacity (K) - Number of individuals
that can be supported indefinitely in a
particular area.
Population Growth Rate = r N (K-N/K)
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Life History Strategies
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Adaptation of reproductive rate to the env.
r - rapid growth, no stabilization
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K - slow growth, reaches carrying capacity
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Human Populations
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Throughout most of history, human
populations have been regulated by food
availability, disease, and predation.
Starting in 1700’s, technological changes
enabled humans more control over their
environment and allowed escape from the
confines of logistic growth.
- Expanded carrying capacity
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Population Pyramids
Demographic trends can be predicted only
when a population’s age structure and sex
ratio is considered.
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Uncertain Future
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Rapidly growing human population may
constitute the greatest future challenge to our
biosphere.
Key element in continued growth is uneven distribution among countries.
- Rapid population growth in developing
countries will increase the gap between
rich and poor.
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Review
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Darwin
Theory of Natural Selection
Finch Beaks
Clusters of Species
Drosophila - Cichlids - Buttercups
Ecology
Patterns of Population Growth
Life History Strategies
Human Populations
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission required for reproduction or display
Johnson - The Living World: 3rd Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies