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Activity: Evolution by Natural Selection *Adapted from Drs. Jennifer Doherty and Ingrid Waldron, Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania1 2010, University of California, Los Angeles Life Sciences 1 Demonstration Manual, & Neil Campbell, Exploring Life Lab Manual 2003 Warm-Up: Describe what is happening in figures 1-3. Is the population of mice different in figure 3 than in figure 1? Explain why. Living things that are well adapted to their environment survive and reproduce. Those that are not well adapted don’t survive and reproduce. An adaptation is any characteristic that increases fitness, which is defined as the ability to survive and reproduce. What characteristic of the mice is an adaptation that increased their fitness? The table below gives descriptions of four female mice that live in a beach area which is mostly tan sand with scattered plants. According to the definition given for fitness, which mouse would biologists consider the fittest? Explain why this mouse would be the fittest. Color of fur Black Tan Age at death # pups produced by each female Running speed 2 months 0 8 cm/sec. 8 months 11 6 cm/sec. Tan and Black 4 months 3 7 cm/sec. Cream 2 months 0 5 cm/sec. If a mouse's fur color is generally similar to its mother’s color, what color fur would be most common among the pups? A characteristic which is influenced by genes and passed from parents to offspring is called heritable. Over many generations heritable adaptive characteristics become more common in a population. This process is called evolution by natural selection. Evolution by natural selection takes place over many, many generations. 1 Evolution by natural selection leads to adaptation within a population. The term evolution by natural selection does not refer to individuals changing, only to changes in the frequency of adaptive characteristics in the population as a whole. For example, for the mice that lived in the beach area with tan sand, none of the mice had a change in the color of their fur; however, due to natural selection, tan fur was more common for the pups than for the mother mice. In summary, a heritable characteristic that helps an animal or plant to have more offspring which survive to reproduce will tend to become more common in a population as a result of evolution by natural selection. Questions 1. Explain why a characteristic which helps an animal to live longer will generally tend to become more common in the population as a result of evolution by natural selection. 2. Not all characteristics which contribute to longer life become more common in the population. Some characteristics contribute to long life, but not more offspring. For example, a female cat which is sterile and cannot have any offspring may live longer because she will not experience the biological stresses of repeated pregnancies. Explain why a characteristic like this which contributes to a long life, but with few or no offspring, would not become more common as a result of evolution by natural selection. Galapagos Finches – A Simulation of Natural Selection Medium ground finches on the Galapagos Islands typically feed on small, soft seeds and fruits. The birds prefer soft seeds because they are easier to crack. However, during drought periods, food becomes scarce and birds are forced to eat larger, harder seeds that are difficult to break open. Scientists Peter and Rosemary Grant studied the Galapagos Island’s population of ground finches and discovered that significant variations in beak size of individual birds occurred during periods of drought. Larger/deeper beaks were advantageous adaptations that allowed the finches to open large, hard seeds and get enough food to survive and reproduce during long droughts. This simulation explores how the frequencies of three beak phenotypes change over several generations in a population of a fictitious species of finches, Saccharae utensilus. This finch species has three possible beak variations: fork, knife, spoon. The finch’s ability to acquire food will determine whether it survives and reproduces. The number of offspring produced is dependent on the amount of food obtained, which varies greatly in different environmental conditions. After simulating changes in the finch population for six generations, you will analyze data to discover how the frequency of each beak phenotype in the population changed over the generations. 1. Variation in characteristics: For natural selection to occur, different individuals in a population must have different characteristics. In our simulation, beaks vary in shape; they are forks, knives or spoons. 2. Differences in fitness: For natural selection to occur, the different characteristics of different individuals must contribute to differences in fitness (i.e. differences in ability to 2 survive and reproduce). For example, variation in beak size may influence the success in acquiring food. These differences contribute to survival and therefore success in reproducing. 3. Heritability of characteristics: For natural selection to occur, the characteristics that affect fitness must be heritable (i.e. passed by genes from one generation to the next). In our simulation, a utensil that is born into the bird population is the same type as its parent. For instance, fork types reproduce only forks. Here is what we will do: 1. Your class will be split into three groups, each one assigned a particular beak variation. 2. Beak size/depth of finches increases in periods of drought. Which beak type do you think will be most successful during this time? Why do you think that? 3. Now it is time to become a ground finch. Your teacher will distribute 1 utensil to the lead ‘finch’ in each of the three groups. You will also be given a nest (cup) and ample food supplies consisting of regular and pretzel M & M’s. You are responsible for providing for your finch family and must use only your fork, knife or spoon to obtain food (candy) and put it into your nest. You will be timed and must obtain a specific amount of food in order to survive and reproduce. We will conduct three rounds (generations) during normal conditions and three rounds during a prolonged ‘drought period’. You will measure the number of food pieces after each round and place your data in the table on page 5. Do you think there will be any advantage of having one particular beak type when food is plentiful? 4. Assign a ‘scribe’ from your group who will record the number of food pieces after each round (generation) and write it in the data table. 5. At your teacher’s signal, start feeding. Don’t be shy about competing with your fellow finches but you may only use ONE HAND to get your food (the other should be kept behind your back). When your teacher calls time, STOP feeding. 6. Now count how many M & M’s you have brought back to your nest. Using the data table below, determine if you survive and the number of offspring you produce. Those who die will be reborn as the offspring of the survivors. Food Pieces Collected Outcome Fewer than 6 Does not survive 6–11 Survives but does not reproduce 12–17 Survives and produces 1 offspring 18–23 Survives and produces 2 offspring 24–29 Survives and produces 3 offspring 3 7. You will run through the ‘normal years’ simulation two more times. Your scribe should keep track of bird numbers at the beginning of the simulation (generation 1) and at the end of each cycle (generations 2 and 3). Then, exchange data with the other teams (beak types) for each generation and calculate the percent that are forks, knives, or spoons. Record your data in the table below. 8. Now suppose that you island is experiencing a drought. The type of food available for the finches to eat has changed. Perform rounds 4 – 6 the same way you performed rounds 1 – 3. Record your data in the table below. Fork Generation 1 population size Percent Normal Years Beak Variation Knife Spoon Beak Variation Total 1 1 1 3 33.3 33.3 33.3 100% Generation 2 population size Percent Spoon 100% Spoon Generation 6 Population size Percent Fork 100% Beak Variation Drought Years Generation 5 Population size Percent % Generation 3 – % Generation 1 Knife Generation 3 population size Percent Generation 4 Population size Percent % Change in Frequency 1 Beak Variation Fork Knife 1 1 Total % Change in Frequency % Generation 6 – % Generation 4 3 Fork 33.3 33.3 33.3 100% Knife 100% Spoon 100% 4 9. Graph the data in the space below. This will allow you to observe the changes in the variations of each beak type over the six generations. Title: IV: DV: 5 Questions 1. Did evolution by natural selection occur in both rainy and drought times? In other words, did one beak variation become more common over time while the others became less common? What traits contributed to the survival of finches that survived to reproduce? 2. Did any individual finches change beak shape or adapt? If not, then why did the beaks in the final finch population differ from the beaks of the finches in the original populations? 4. What do you think would happen to the finch population if they experienced a decade long drought? 4. Explain why evolution by natural selection cannot occur if there is no variation in a particular characteristic. 5. Explain why evolution by natural selection cannot occur if the variation in a characteristic does not contribute to differences in fitness. 6 6. The following example will illustrate that evolution by natural selection can not occur if the variation in a characteristic is not heritable. This example also illustrates a more complete definition of fitness, which is the ability to survive and produce offspring who can also survive and reproduce. According to this definition of fitness, which of the four male lions described below would biologists consider the “fittest”? Name George Dwayne Spot Tyrone Age at death 13 years 16 years 12 years 10 years # cubs fathered 19 25 20 20 # cubs surviving to adulthood 15 14 14 19 Size 10 feet 8.5 feet 9 feet 9 feet (Adapted from Michigan State University, Occasional Paper No. 91, Evolution by Natural Selection: A Teaching Module by Beth Bishop and Charles Anderson, 1986) Explain why Dwayne is not the fittest even though he lived the longest and fathered the most cubs. Which of the following scenarios would result in natural selection? a. Tyrone has heritable characteristics that increase resistance to infections and help cubs survive to adulthood. b. Tyrone happens to live near a farmer who puts antibiotics in meat, which he leaves out for Tyrone's lion cubs. Explain why natural selection does not operate on characteristics which affect fitness but are not heritable. 7. "Survival of the fittest" is a common expression. What do you think most people mean by this expression? How would you explain this expression to help someone understand how natural selection actually functions? 7 8. Below is a series of pictures representing changes in a population of cacti. Pictures 1 and 2 show what happened when a deer came to eat, picture 3 shows the cacti a few weeks later (notice the flowers on the right-hand cactus), and picture 4 shows the situation a few months later. 1 2 3 4 Recall that the three conditions listed below are necessary for natural selection to take place. 1. Variation in characteristics within the population: In picture 1, what is the main difference between the cactus on the left and the cactus on the right? 2. Differences in survival and reproduction, fitness: Why would a deer be more likely to eat the cactus on the left than the cactus on the right? What effect does the deer's behavior have on the survival and reproduction of these two types of cactus? 3. Heritability of characteristics from parent to offspring: The difference between the cacti is a heritable characteristic (see picture 4). Do you think that evolution by natural selection is occurring in this cactus population? Explain why or why not. 8