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Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota 0 20 I BIOPRE43211 2 er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n P0025980 Number: 43211 Title: Evolution of Australian biota This publication is copyright New South Wales Department of Education and Training (DET), however it may contain material from other sources which is not owned by DET. We would like to acknowledge the following people and organisations whose material has been used: Photographs courtesy of Jane West Part 2 p 19, Part 5 pp 28, 29, 30, 32 Photographs of skulls of extinct fossil Miocene platypus and modern platypus from Grant, T (1995) The platypus. A unique mammal, University of NSW Press Part 3 p 29 Sketches of fossil and modern platypus skulls from Musser, A. M. and Archer, M (1998) New information about the skull and dentary of the Miocene platypus Obdurodon dicksoni, a discussion of ornithorhychid relationships. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, B 353. Part 3 p 30 Maps of Australia showing average summer and winter temperatures and rainfall. from Australians and the environment, AUSLIG, ABS 1992 Part 4 p 4 Graphs showing distances moved by platypuses in Thredbo River and body temperatures from Grant, T (1995) The platypus. A unique mammal, University of NSW Press Part 4 pp 12, 13 Text extract from Grant, T. R. and Temple-Smith, P. D. (1998) Field biology of the platypus (Ornithorhychus anatinus) : historical and current perspectives. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, B 353. Part 4 p 18 Photograph of a rainbow lorikeet courtesy of D. Gonzalvez Part 5 p 16 Photographs of a young red kangaroo and a young echidna, from Griffiths, M (1978) The biology of the monotremes. Academic Press Part 5 pp 22, 23 COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 WARNING This material has been reproduced and communicated to you on behalf of the New South Wales Department of Education and Training (Centre for Learning Innovation) pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further reproduction or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. CLI would also like to thank the following people who have contributed to the development of this resource: Writer: Tom Grant All reasonable efforts have been made to obtain copyright permissions. All claims will be settled in good faith. Published by Centre for Learning Innovation (CLI) 51 Wentworth Rd Strathfield NSW 2135 _______________________________________________________________________________________________ _ Copyright of this material is reserved to the Crown in the right of the State of New South Wales. Reproduction or transmittal in whole, or in part, other than in accordance with provisions of the Copyright Act, is prohibited without the written authority of the Centre for Learning Innovation (CLI). © State of New South Wales, Department of Education and Training 2008. Contents Module overview ....................................................................... iii Outcomes ............................................................................................ iii Indicative time...................................................................................... iii Resources............................................................................................ iii Icons .................................................................................................... iv Glossary................................................................................................v Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution ................. 1-45 Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota....... 1-35 Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia ........ 1-32 Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment .............. 1-24 Part 5: Reproductive adaptations ........................................ 1-36 Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction............................. 1-22 Student evaluation of the module Introduction i ii Evolution of Australian biota Module overview The flora and fauna of Australia evolved over millions of years. During this time the climate changed as well as the position of what is now Australia. In this module you will learn about the formation of modern Australia from its origin as part of Gondwana land until the continent was isolated. The changing climate over this time affected the plants and animals. The study of the fossil record and past environments will help you to understand how our actions can affect ecosystems now and in the future. Outcomes This module increases students’ understanding of the applications and uses of biology, implications for society and the environment and current issues, research and developments in biology. Indicative time This module is divided into six parts. You need to spend at least five hours on each part. Therefore, the module Evolution of Australian biota is designed so that you should take at least thirty indicative hours to complete. Resources Part 1: Introduction • at least one plant to observe and measure • at least one animal to observe and measure iii Icons The following icons are used within this module. The meaning of each icon is written beside it. The hand icon means there is an activity for you to do. It may be an experiment or you may make something. You need to use a computer for this activity. Discuss ideas with someone else. You could speak with family or friends or anyone else who is available. Perhaps you could telephone someone? There is a safety issue that you need to consider. There are suggested answers for the following questions at the end of the part. There is an exercise at the end of the part for you to complete. You need to go outside or away from your desk for this activity. iv Evolution of Australian biota Glossary The following words, listed here with their meanings, are found in the learning material in this module. They appear bolded the first time they occur in the learning material. Introduction adaptive radiation increase in the numbers of groups of organisms evolving from a single common ancestor in areas with different selective pressures angiosperms flowering plants aquatic living in water arid environment environment where rainfall is very low and evaporation is very high; an area where conditions are very dry artificial selection increase or decrease in the frequency of particular genetic characteristics within a population due to selection by humans asthenosphere semi-molten outer layer of the mantle of the Earth biota all species of organism found in a particular area browser herbivore animal which eats shrubs, usually as well as grass cellular respiration the cellular process resulting in the production of energy for other cell processes chromosome structures made up of genetic material (DNA) and protein found mainly in the nucleus core the innermost layers of the Earth, consisting of a solid inner and liquid outer core counter-current heat exchange arrangement of blood vessels where blood flow in opposite directions in arterial and venous vessels causes heat to be retained in the body convection current movements within a liquid due to heating convergent evolution the independent evolution of similar adaptations in unrelated groups in response to similar selection pressures crossing-over exchange of parts between pairs of chromosomes during meiosis crust the thin (5-50 km thick) outer layer of the Earth v vi cuticle waxy layer on the surface of leaves which can reduce water loss by being impervious to water; shiny cuticles can also reflect electromagnetic radiation in the visible band DNA deoxyribonucleic acid; - the molecule which makes up the genetic material of the chromosomes endothermic animals, mainly mammals and birds which regulate their body temperatures using heat generated by their metabolism ectothermic animals which regulate their body temperature by using heat from the environment; most animals apart from mammals and birds entomology the study of insects evaporative cooling cooling of the bodies of plants or animals by evaporation of water from the body surface or from the respiratory system; occurs in birds and mammals eg. panting in dogs evolution change in the genetic make-up of a population over time extinction disappearance of a group of organisms; this can occur when variations, which permit survival of some individuals as a result of changed natural selection pressures, are not present in the population fauna all species of animals found in a particular area fertilisation fusion of the nuclei of sperm and ovum in animals or pollen and ovum in plants flora all species of plants found in a particular area fossil remains of an organism, or direct evidence of its presence in rock, ice, amber, tar, peat or volcanic ash frequency number of individuals or structures of a particular value or belonging to a specific category (eg. numbers of members in a class who are a particular height) gamete sex cell; sperm or ovum in animals and pollen and ovum in plants gaseous exchanges the exchange of gases between an organism and its environment; uptake of oxygen and loss of carbon dioxide in all living organisms; uptake of carbon dioxide and release of oxygen in plants Evolution of Australian biota Introduction gene a unit of inheritance, usually part of a specific DNA molecule (chromosome) Gondwanaland (Gondwana) southern supercontinent originally made up of south America, Antarctica, Africa, India, Australia and New Zealand grazer herbivorous animal which eats mainly grass habitat the place where a particular organism lives half life the time taken for half of a radioactive material to decay home range area or distance used by an animal in its normal day-to-day activities homeothermy maintenance of a stable body temperature hypothesis statement of what is expected to occur; hypotheses (plural) are supported or rejected as a result of experiments (experiments are used to test hypotheses) ice core long sample of ice collected by drilling into a glacier or ice sheet insulation structures (eg. fat, fur feathers) or changes in blood circulation (tissue insulation) that reduce heat loss from the body of animals inter-glacial periods between ice ages Laurasia northern supercontinent from which North America and Eurasia originated mantle series of middle layers of the Earth, the semimolten outer layer is the asthenosphere meiosis process of cell division which gives rise to gametes; leads to variation in gametes; reduces the number of chromosomes by half metabolism all of the biochemical reactions occurring in the body; heat is produced as a by-product of metabolism monotremes (Monotremata) group of mammals which lay eggs; include two living species of spiny anteaters (echidnas) and the platypus mutation a change within the genetic material which can be inherited naturalist a person who studies the natural history or general biology of plants and/or animals collector of scientific information which is extremely valuable but not always quantitative vii viii natural selection increase or decrease in the frequency of particular genetically controlled characteristics within a population due to environmental (selection) agents favouring or acting against them nocturnal active at night osmoregulation regulation of salt and water in the body palaeontology the study of fossil organisms and their evolutionary relationships Pangaea world supercontinent consisting of the landmasses originally making up Gondwanaland (Gondwana) and those of the northern hemisphere continents which initially were part of Laurasia placental (eutherian) mammal mammals where there is a complex connection between the uterus of the mother and the developing embryo (by the placenta). These include all modern mammal groups except the marsupials and monotremes (echidnas and platypuses) population a group of individuals of the same species living in the same area at a certain time qualitative descriptive grouping (eg. large, small, medium sized) quantitative a numerical grouping (eg. 1, 2, 3 or 4 cm) radiometric dating estimation of the age of fossils or rocks using the rate of decay of radioactive elements they contain radio telemetry recording quantitative data on body functions (eg. body temperature, heart and breathing rates) using radio transmitters attached to organisms; permits these data to be collected in free-living organisms radio tracking using radio transmitters attached to animals to follow their movements and activity relative dating estimation of the age of fossils or rocks in relation to other fossils or rocks of known ages sclerophyll hard leafed plants often adapted to withstand dry and/or fire conditions eg. gum trees of the genera Eucalyptus and Angophora selection agent environmental agents which favour or act against certain variations in populations (eg. predators) Evolution of Australian biota Introduction selection pressure factor(s) in the environment which favour or act against certain variations in populations (eg. predation, disease) species a group of individuals which can breed with each other to produce fertile offspring under natural conditions speciation the evolutionary process of formation of new species stomate openings in the surface of leaves controlled by two guard cells which permit gaseous exchange and transpiration terrestrial living on land theory of plate tectonics the theory that crustal plates and their associated landmasses move transpiration evaporation of water from plants, mainly through the stomates of the leaves urea highly soluble metabolic waste product produced by most mammals; a lot of water is needed to excrete this material uric acid fairly insoluble metabolic waste product produced by insects, birds and reptiles; little water is needed to excrete this material variation differences in characteristics of members of a population; such variations depend on the genetic make-up of individuals in the population vasodilation expansion of blood vessels to increase blood flow vasoconstriction contraction of blood vessels to decrease blood flow ix Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 0 20 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Gill Sans Bold Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Genetic variation ....................................................................... 4 Investigation of variations ....................................................................8 Natural selection and evolution ............................................... 11 How does it work?..............................................................................11 Example of natural selection..............................................................14 Charles Darwin........................................................................ 19 Natural selection – whose big idea?..................................................19 Darwin’s studies .................................................................................20 The voyage of the Beagle..................................................................21 Summary................................................................................. 33 Additional resources................................................................ 35 Suggested answers................................................................. 37 Exercises – Part 1 ................................................................... 41 Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 1 Introduction Around 170 million years ago (mya) Australia was part of the huge southern continent of Gondwanaland (otherwise known as Gondwana). This included the land areas of the Earth now known as Africa, India, South America, New Zealand and Australia. About 100 mya, towards the end of the period when the dinosaurs were the most prominent terrestrial vertebrate fauna, this supercontinent began to break up. The Australian continent finally separated from Antarctica about 48–38 mya. As Australia continued to move north towards the equator its geology, geography and climate underwent considerable change. The process of natural selection acting on the different individuals within groups of organisms resulted in the evolution of new species and the extinction of others. In this module you will investigate the way in which environmental changes in Australia over geological time have resulted in the Evolution of Australian biota. In Part 1, you will be given opportunities to learn to: 2 • discuss examples of variation between members of species • identify the relationship between variation within a species and the chances of survival of species when environmental change occurs • discuss Darwin’s observations of Australian flora and fauna and relate these to his theory of evolution Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold In Part 1 you will be given opportunities to: • present information from secondary sources to discuss the Huxley – Wilberforce debate on Darwin’s theory of evolution. • perform a first-hand investigation to gather information of examples of variation in at least two species of organism. Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 3 Genetic variation Look around your family, your school or local community and you will see that all of us look different. You may look very like either your mother or father. You can probably remember when you were very young how you might have hated it when relatives made comments like ‘he has his father’s ears’ or ‘she looks just like a younger version of her Mum’! However, apart from identical twins we all look a bit different from other members of our families and from other members of our community. Of course, all of these variations which we see in people are also found in all other species as well. Even though the kookaburras or magpies in your back garden look pretty much alike to you, they really are a bit different and may also act differently from each other. The variations which are found in individuals of the same species are caused by differences in their genetic make-up; they have different combinations of their genes. You may remember from previous work that genes are made of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) molecules which make up chromosomes. All members of the same species normally have the same number of chromosomes. These chromosomes occur in pairs (eg. humans have 46 chromosomes or 23 pairs); one of each pair coming from the mother and the other from the father. The table following shows the numbers of chromosomes found in a variety of species. You might expect humans to have more chromosomes than an onion or even a kangaroo, but what about a platypus or a dog? The number of chromosomes a species has does not appear to be related to how advanced it is. Some ferns have 250 chromosomes, while humans have only 46! 4 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Species Total number of chromosomes Number of pairs of chromosomes cat 38 19 brush-tail possum 20 10 eastern grey kangaroo 30 15 platypus 52 26 dog 78 39 fern 250 125 onion 16 8 Numbers of chromosomes in various species. Because chromosomes occur in pairs, genes also occur in pairs except those that are sex-linked. Normally all individuals of the same species have a pair of genes for each trait or characteristic. For example, eye colour or the ability to roll your tongue. But these genes can have different forms. There is a dark and a light form of the gene for eye colour, for example. One form of gene for eye colour is different from the other and can produce a difference in the colour of a person’s eyes. This depends on which form of the gene they inherit from each parent. One form of the gene is due to a change from the original. Such a change is called a mutation. Mutations occur fairly infrequently and often do not stay in the population long because they are detrimental (unfavourable) to survival or reproduction of the individuals that have them. You might remember that this process is called natural selection. (You will return to this important process in the next section.) When a mutation does occur, it can be beneficial in certain environments or be fairly neutral in its effects so that it stays in the population. There seems to be little advantage of having light or dark coloured eyes for example and so the forms of the gene for both colours remains in our population. All of the mutations that persist in a population increase the genetic variation in that population. During the process of sexual reproduction the genetic variations already present due to mutations are shuffled around. This occurs during the production of gametes (sex cells), sperm and ova. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 5 The process of cell division involved in the production of gametes is called meiosis. In meiosis, chromosomes are independently assorted and some parts may be exchanged between chromosome pairs (called crossing-over). Further recombinations of genes also takes place at fertilisation when there are large numbers of possible combinations of gametes coming together. This depends on the genetic make-up of the parents giving rise to the gametes. You will find out more about these processes later in this module and also in later modules in the course. List the processes which lead to increased genetic variation within species. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Check your answers. When conditions change in the environment occupied by a group of organisms, this group may not have the necessary characteristics which will permit the best adapted of them to survive such a change. As a result, the population may die out or fail to continue reproducing. However, if there are some individuals in the population that have a variation which permits them to survive, reproduce and pass this variation on to their offspring, then the best adapted members of the group may well survive the change. This is how the process of natural selection works. Think about this fictitious example: It is summer in tropical Australia and it is very hot. The air temperature has fallen from the middle of the day and as it is nearly dark, water rats have just come out of their burrows to feed along the river banks. Most have fairly thin fur, which keeps them warm enough in the cooler times of winter but does not make them too hot in summer. However, in this group there is a family whose members have much thicker fur. It is still too hot for them and they will need to wait until later in the night before they start feeding. They often return to their burrows hungry the next morning, as they are too late to get some of the food available to the others in the population. Times are hard for this family and their feeding time is so restricted that they have very little energy left for mating and rearing young. The family is quite small compared to that of the others in the group. For some reason there is a change of climate, perhaps due to the effects of a series of volcanic eruptions producing ash in the 6 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold atmosphere, that reduces the amount of sunlight reaching the area. It becomes much colder. In this situation, the thick furred water rats are at an advantage because their thick fur coats insulate them from the cold, while the others in the population are at a disadvantage. If the cold climate continues for some time, the offspring of the thick furred family will have more time to come out to feed in the cold, while the thin furred rats will need to spend more time in their burrows sheltering from the cold. They will need to chase around much more to get enough food to regulate their body temperatures. The thick furred rats will have more time and energy for breeding. Over a period of time, there will be an increase in the number of their offspring, with thick fur coats, and a decrease in those with the thinner coats. You will look at the process of natural selection in quite a bit more detail as you learn more biology in this and other modules in the course. But it is important for you now to understand how it happens and why genetic variation is so important to the process. Next you will be doing an exercise to examine variation in species in your local area, but before you do, answer the following questions below to check your progress. Answer the following questions using the information you have read so far on genetic variation. The first two are multiple choice questions. Choose the best answer for each question. 1 Natural selection occurs where: A) an organism cannot cope with its environment and moves away B) the individuals in a population best adapted to the environment survive and reproduce C) some individuals in a population change their behaviour as the environment changes so that they can survive and reproduce D) the environment changes and all of the individuals in a population become extinct. 2 A mutation is best described as: A) organisms adapting to a changing environment B) a change in an individual’s genetic make-up (genes or chromosomes) C) a process resulting from sexual reproduction D) individuals in the population being affected by radiation Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 7 3 Most biologists agree that the occurrence of variation within a population of organisms is very important to the survival of a species. Why is this so? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Check your answers. Investigation of variations Enough reading. It is time to get out and do something. In this activity you will investigate variations within populations of two species within your local area. You have thought about the differences between humans in your family, class and community, but these differences are hard to measure. Now, you will look at variations within two species of plants or animals which you can measure, for example length, width or height. It is a good idea to use one plant and one animal in your investigation. Animal species which don’t move around too much and are not damaged or stressed by you handling them are best eg. garden snails or even worms from the garden; mussels, oysters or marine snails from a rock platform. Hypothesis It is usual for scientists to make a statement of what they think is happening and then to take measurements to test the idea. What is expected is stated as a hypothesis. For example: ‘It is expected that not all snails measured will be, of the same size but will show individual variation within the species.’ Method Decide what species you will use to look at variation. You will need access to at least 20 of each. Decide what you will measure eg. length of shell, length of body, number of stripes on the shell, width of the leaf, height of the plant. You can measure more than one feature for each species. Follow the steps below. 8 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold 1 Describe what species you are measuring, the features you are measuring and how you are going to measure them. This should be headed as the Method section of your report. 2 Measure and record each individual’s features eg. height of garden snail shell for example, 22, 23, 17, 18, 12, 19, 18, 14, 16, 17, 24 mm. You can see that there is a range of sizes, most of which are different from each other. You can group those which are similar to each other so that you have a few groups representing similar heights. You can use a quantitative (or numerical) way of making groupings. Alternatively you can use a quality eg. ‘very small’, ‘small’, ‘medium,’ ‘large’ and ‘very large’. These are qualitative descriptions, such as we use for things like the sizes of some of our clothes. 3 Record your information in a table. An example is shown below. Garden snail Height of shell category (mm) 4 Banksia Number in each category (freq.) Width of leaf category (mm) Number in each category (freq.) 1-9 1 10-11 1 10-14 5 12-13 5 15-19 6 14-15 4 20-24 3 16-17 3 25-39 0 18-19 1 Use these figures to draw a column graph of the numbers in each category. Use the graph paper in the Additional resource. Number in each group 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 to 9 10 to 14 15 to 19 Size group 20 to 24 25 to 29 (mm) Shell height in garden snails. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 9 5 Describe what your measurements show. For example, ‘There was variation in shell height of the snails but there were very few which had a shell height less than 10 mm and none were longer than 24 mm.’ 6 Your measurements, table and graph should be headed Results section of your report. 7 Discuss what you think your results show. For example, ‘As expected measurements show that there was some variation in the heights of the species of snail studied and I accept my hypothesis that not all snails of the same species have the same size, but show genetic variation.’ 8 You may like to think about factors other than genetic variation which could affect your conclusions. For example, ‘Although it seems that there is considerable variation within the snail species in terms of shell height, some of this variation could be due to growth. Some of the smaller individuals may simply have been younger.’ 9 You could then think about how you could modify your experiment to get around this difficulty. ‘You may not be able to modify your actual experiment in this but at least you can think about how you might. For example, ‘It is possible to tell the age of quite a lot of animal species in some way. This could possibly have done for the snails and then only adults were measured in the experiment.’ Complete Exercise 1.1 at the end of this part. 10 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Natural selection and evolution Although Charles Darwin is normally associated with the idea of evolution of species, his grandfather, Erasmus Darwin had already challenged the idea that all species were created by God and did not change after their creation. Erasmus Darwin had suggested that existing species may well have arisen from earlier forms, but gave no mechanism or process by which this could have occurred. His grandson came up with this mechanism, although it was thought of at almost exactly the same time by Alfred Wallace, a biologist who was working in south-east Asia at the time. The mechanism, you may remember is called natural selection. How does it work? You read about a fictitious example of a population of water rats in the last section. Now you will examine a more general explanation in six steps which can be applied to a range of real examples. Organisms are able to produce large numbers of offspring in their life time but… under natural conditions the numbers in a population of a species tend not to keep increasing. This means that… most new recruits to a population must die before they can reproduce, so that there is a struggle for existence and… there are some winners and some losers. Some members of a population have genetic variations which make them better adapted to their environment and so… these survive and reproduce more quickly than those who are not as well adapted. This means that the genetic variations of the better adapted are passed on to the next generations. As a result… Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 11 a population will change so that eventually it will be almost entirely made up of the best adapted individuals. This change in a population is called evolution. The process described by the general model, described above can be summarised as the statement ‘survival of the fittest’. More correctly it should be ‘survival [and reproduction] of the fittest’. The process only works if the best adapted individuals pass on their genetic variations which determine their better adaptation to the environment. So how does this help with the idea put up by Charles Darwin’s grandfather that new species can arise from earlier species? Time is an important part of the answer to this question. The Earth is around 4.7 billion years (4700 million years) old and so this process of change has been going on for a very long time indeed. During these vast periods of time, the climate and geology of the Earth has been changing. So the environmental conditions experienced by organisms have changed in different parts of the world and at different times. Speciation Populations of the same species may evolve in different ways under different selection pressures, particularly if they are geographically separated from each other. Eventually, populations of related organisms may become so unlike each other that they are recognised as different species. They may be so different that, even if they were no longer geographically isolated from each other, they still could not breed under natural conditions to produce fertile offspring. This process of formation of new species is called speciation. So how do we get new groups? How did the reptiles evolve from the amphibians or birds and mammals evolve from the reptiles? Good questions. No one was there when this was happening. Our model of evolution by natural selection suggests that changes between groups over such long periods of time and under such changes in natural selection could eventually lead to the evolution of a completely new group of organisms. For example, a population of a certain species of reptile may have become isolated from other populations of that species in a new area with a very different environment. The isolated group may have changed so much under the influence of different selection pressures in the new area over a long period of time, that it would eventually have features so different from other reptiles that it could be recognised as being an entirely new group – the mammals. This new mammal group in turn 12 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold could be separated into different populations in different areas. So, over time new groups of mammals evolved from this original mammal group (common ancestor). There is lots of indirect evidence that suggests common ancestry for the present large groups of organisms, but you will consider these at another time in the course. In a later part of this module you will look closely at how scientists think the flora and fauna of Australia evolved. Adaptive radiation The ideas outlined here seem to fit well with the geological and climatic changes occurring in the Australian land mass once it broke away from South America and Antarctica and began moving north around 38-45 mya. These geological and climatic changes would certainly have produced different selection pressures on groups of organisms geographically isolated in different parts of Australia. The evolution of new groups occurred throughout the changing world and is known as adaptive radiation or divergent evolution. Adaptive radiation produces new groups from ancestral populations which have been acted on by different selection pressures in different parts of the world. These are not easy ideas. Work back through the material above, including the model in six steps and then attempt to answer the questions that follow. 1 Selection pressures are best defined by which statement? A) Factors of the environment which favour or act against certain variations in populations. B) The effect of the weight of the ocean water on organisms living in the depths of the sea. C) Ways in which organisms change in response to changes in their environments. D) Environmental factors which cause organisms to change their behaviour so that they can survive. 2 Speciation is the process by which new species are formed. This process occurs as a result of which following process: A) Different selection pressures acting on populations of different species in different places. B) Different selection pressures acting on populations of the same species in different places. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 13 C) Different selection pressures acting on populations of the same species in the same place. D) The same selection pressures acting on populations of the same species in different places. 3 Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace were important to the development of the theory of evolution because they both: A) thought that species were created by God and did not change B) suggested that only individuals which produced the most offspring survived C) believed modern organisms evolved from earlier forms D) thought that natural selection was the mechanism producing change within species. 4 Adaptive radiation of new species and groups of plants and animals took place in Australia after it broke away from Antarctica and moved north. Briefly describe the process by which this adaptive radiation of many different forms of biota could have occurred. (Hint: try to use terms like natural selection, geographic isolation, selection pressure and change.) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Check your answers. Examples of natural selection Although the process of evolution of new species is thought to occur extremely slowly, the selection of variations in a population which are most adapted to the environment has been witnessed and studied. The peppered moth A good example of selection was carried out in Britain in the early 1950s by the biologist, H B D Kettlewell. Although it was carried out many years ago, it is a good example of a study of the importance of variations 14 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold in the process of adaptation to the environment. It also provides an illustration of how evolution takes place under the influence of natural selection. Kettlewell studied a species called the peppered moth (Biston betularia) which occurs in two different coloured forms (genetic variations), one dark and one light. The dark (melanistic) form was always more abundant in populations around the industrial areas of the country. In those days, before the stringent air pollution laws of various Clean Air Acts, soot and dust from smokestacks of factories covered buildings, trees and other objects, making them dark in colour. Those in non-industrial areas, where trees were often covered by lichens, were light in colour. In these areas the populations of peppered moths were mainly of the light (typical) colour. Kettlewell reasoned that these variations were being acted upon by different natural selection pressures in the two different areas. In the industrial areas the dark forms had the advantage of being camouflaged. When the dark moths rested on tree trunks during the day they were less obvious to the birds which fed on them, while the light variation was easily seen and more often taken by these predators. In the non-industrial areas the opposite was the case–the light coloured variation was harder to see against the light backgrounds so that fewer were taken by predators. Look at the drawings below showing these two forms of moth on typical backgrounds in industrial and non-industrial areas. You can see that Kettlewell’s ideas seemed pretty reasonable. He suggested that this showed natural selection occurring and he set about designing a series of experiments to test whether he was right. Light and dark coloured peppered moths against different backgrounds. Experiment 1: Capture-recapture studies Kettlewell released 201 light moths and 601 dark ones, which he had marked with spots of coloured paint, into a polluted woodland near the industrial city of Birmingham. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 15 If it was true that birds were acting as a selection agent by finding the light moths more easily, then he would expect that more of the marked light moths than dark ones would be eaten by birds before they could be recaptured. His results showed exactly that: he recaptured 34% of the marked dark moths but only 16% of the light ones – hypothesis proved? Well, yes but perhaps it was just that dark ones were more attracted to the light traps. Kettlewell was a good scientist so he had planned for this and had included a control in his experiment. In a woodland in Dorset, a non-industrial area, Kettlewell repeated the experiment. If it was the light trap which had caused the bias towards recapturing dark moths, then he would have expected to have still caught more dark moths in this area as well. However, if his original hypothesis was correct, it would have been expected that in the control experiment more dark moths would have been taken by birds and so fewer of these would have been recaptured. The percentage recaptures are shown in the table and graph below. You might like to practise your graphing skills and draw your own graph from the data in the table. If you have a spreadsheet package on your home computer, school or workplace you could use it for this task. Industrial Area Non-industrial Area Dark variation 34.0% recapture 6.3% recapture Light variation 16.0% recapture 12.5% recapture 35 30 % Recapture 25 20 15 Light 10 5 Colour variation Dark 0 Industrial Non-industrial Location The graphed results of Kettlewell’s mark-recapture experiment. 16 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold The results show that it was not a difference in behaviour between the two colour forms which had resulted in different capture rates, but was probably related to the different selection pressures in the two environments. But could Kettlewell be sure that the birds were the selecting agent? Not really, from this experiment. Experiment 2: Predator observations Kettlewell and his assistants set up shelters or ‘hides’ from where they could observe birds feeding. They placed equal numbers of both dark and light moths on trees at the Birmingham site. Imagine you are a biologist and answer the following self test questions. 1 State a hypothesis for what Kettlewell might have expected to observe in his experiment. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 2 The numbers of each colour variation of moth they saw being taken by birds in the industrial area is listed below. • Dark variation, 15 taken by birds. • Light variation, 43 taken by birds. Do these figures support your hypothesis? ___________________ 3 How could you have improved this experiment? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Check your answers. Pesticide and antibiotic resistance Although the study of the peppered moth is a good example of natural selection acting on variations within a population, there are other examples which are now becoming familiar to us. Insecticides, herbicides and antibiotics are all selection agents which act on the variations within populations of insects, plants or bacteria respectively. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 17 If the insect, plant or bacterial populations contain individuals with genetic variations making them resistant to these chemicals, they will survive and reproduce so that this genetic variation for resistance to the chemical is passed on to their offspring. Over a period of time the populations of these pests can become completely resistant to the chemicals. We must keep producing new insecticides to protect our crops from being eaten by insects and new antibiotics to combat bacteria which cause infections as the genetic make-up of existing populations of these are changed under the influence of natural selection. Extinction It is worth remembering that pesticides and antibiotics can often work successfully as some of the populations of insects or bacteria on which they are used have no genetic variations within them that make them resistant. In this instance all of the population is killed by the chemical. When a change in the environment occurs in nature, groups of organisms which do not have genetic variations (that allow some individuals in the group to survive that change) the group will die out, this is extinction. While many new species evolve as a result of the action of natural selection, many others have become extinct under its influence. Environmental change (probably a fall in global temperature) at the end of the Cretaceous period (around 65 mya) resulted in the dinosaurs becoming extinct. Obviously, none of the groups of these species had the genetic variations which permitted them to survive the selection pressures of the changed environment. 18 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Charles Darwin Natural selection – whose big idea? The idea that the environment can select the most adapted variations within a population of organisms had obviously been thought of before Darwin wrote about it in this famous book On The Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection in 1859. Rather than earlier writings Darwin is remembered because in his writings Darwin explained his ideas and supported them with many observations and data he had collected over years of study of the biology of large numbers of organisms. The fact that Darwin’s other work in biology had made him famous also meant that his ideas were noticed by other biologists and by the public. Actually, there is another very interesting historical example of this happening. Although Darwin had observed the variations within species, he had no idea that these variations were genetic. Genes and chromosomes were unknown at that time. However, in Austria a Catholic monk by the name of Gregor Mendel had carried out experiments by breeding garden peas and had worked out that inheritance was determined by pairs of genes (he called them ‘factors’), one coming from the gamete of the male parent and the other from the female gamete during fertilisation. Mendel published his work in an obscure journal. We know that he was aware of Darwin’s work but Darwin had never heard of Mendel. In his writings, Darwin indicated that he worried about how the variations he observed could have come about and how they were inherited. These worries could have been eased if he had known of Mendel’s work with garden peas, but he died 18 years before Mendel’s writings were ‘rediscovered’. In 1900, 35 years after Mendel’s work was published, a biologist read his paper and realised its importance. You will look more closely at the Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 19 work of Mendel in the HSC course when you consider genetics in more detail. Darwin’s studies Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury, England, on 12 February 1809. He apparently was quite a good student at school and went on to do medicine at university in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1825. In his autobiography he admits to fleeing from an operation on a child where no anaesthetic was used. He gave up medicine after this event. Both his father and grandfather were doctors but it was decided that he would become a minister in the Church of England and he went to Cambridge University in 1828 to begin his studies. However, he did poorly at his studies as it seems that his main interests were in geology and natural history (biology). When Darwin was 22 years of age, his opportunity to follow his interests came when he received the offer to travel on the naval ship HMS Beagle. The Beagle was going on a voyage to survey and map much of the South American coastline, before sailing around the world via the Galapagos Islands, Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa. Charles Darwin Read the information below which describes Darwin’s voyage on the Beagle. You will use this information in Exercise 1.2. 20 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold The voyage of the Beagle It was normal for naturalists to go on voyages of discovery in this time. (You might remember that Joseph Banks was the botanist on Cook’s voyage to Australia.) But Darwin actually went as a companion for Captain Fitzroy. This too was not unusual as the officers did not associate with the other sailors and needed companions to prevent them going mad from boredom on long voyages. It is interesting that in fact Darwin and Fitzroy did not see eye-to-eye and were poor companions for each other. Darwin, as you might expect from his second choice of career was a Christian, but Fitzroy was much more devout and in later life he strongly criticised Darwin’s ideas. Captain Fitzroy was very interested in weather forecasting but became depressed when he got it wrong – just like the weather bureau does now! He apparently made a poor job of being governor of New Zealand and felt responsible for Darwin’s views, which went against his understanding of the Bible. Fitzroy eventually committed suicide. Exploring South America The Beagle left Devonport in the south of England on 27 December 1831 and sailed to the east coast of South America, arriving on 28 February 1832. Nearly four years were spent surveying both the east and west coasts of South America (see the map). During this time Darwin spent time exploring Brazil (February- July 1832), Argentina (July 1832-May 1834), Chile and Peru (July 1834-September 1835) and the Galapagos Islands (September-October 1835). He was seasick almost the whole time and so spent as much time ashore as he could. Below is a short excerpt from his Journal describing the seas around Cape Horn. ‘…the sea looked ominous: there was so much foam, that it resembled a dreary plain covered by patches of drifted snow… At noon the storm was at its height, and we began to suffer. A great sea struck us and came on board; the after tackle of the quarter boat gave way and, an axe being obtained, they were instantly obliged to cut away one of the beautiful whaleboats [life boats]. The same sea filled our decks so deep that if another had followed it is not difficult to guess the result…Captain Fitzroy considers it the worst gale he was ever in.’ During his time in South America and the Galapagos Islands, Darwin collected a host of specimens of both fossil and living organisms, as well Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 21 as geological specimens. He became intrigued by the similarities of the organisms he found to those he was familiar with from Britain. Often he could match these similarities with species from similar habitats. He was also fascinated however by finding completely different species, both living and fossil. After leaving the Galapagos Islands at the end of October 1835 the Beagle sailed to Sydney via Tahiti and New Zealand. By then Darwin had tired of the voyage and was resigned to doing little natural history. He looked forward to some social life in these settled sections of the British Empire! He wrote in a letter to Professor of Botany at Cambridge University: ‘During the remainder of our voyage, we shall only visit places generally acknowledged as civilised and nearly all under the British Flag. There will be a poor field for Nat: History and without it, I have lately discovered that the pleasures of seeing new places are as nothing.’ Darwin obviously assumed that all of the organisms would have already been studied by other biologists in these areas, but of course he was not correct. He actually spent quite a lot of time collecting specimens of plants and animals in Australia, although he did not make a great deal of use of them in his writings about evolution. Exploring Australia Darwin was in Sydney only from 11-30 January 1836, in which time he made a trip to Bathurst, the furthest west settlement at that time in New South Wales. He observed quite a few bird species, especially parrots and saw platypuses in the Cox’s River near what is now the town of Lithgow. Darwin also collected rock platform animals and 92 species of insects around Sydney, including 32 which had not been previously described. Four of these were subsequently named after him by entomologists (people who study insects) after he took them back to Britain. After Sydney, the Beagle went to Hobart, where Darwin had his 27th birthday. He climbed Mt Wellington behind the town and collected some plant and animal fossils. Captain Fitzroy set sail from Tasmania on 17 February 1836 and made a final stop in Australia at King George Sound (now the city of Albany) in Western Australia. Although they were only in WA for nine days from 6 March 1836, Darwin hated the place. But he did study the geology, trapped native bush rats (Rattus fuscipes) and a frog (Crinia georgiana) and collected fish (20 species), shells, insects and flatworms (planaria). 22 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Darwin even carried out experiments on planarians from both Tasmania and Western Australia, observing that, as occurred with the British species, if they were cut in half they were able to generate both front and hind ends in around 25 days, so that from one cut animal you could get two! This process is common in plants, but the flatworms are one of the few groups of animals in which this occurs. Darwin apparently quite enjoyed the social life, from which he had been starved for over four years, when he was in Sydney and Hobart, but in general was not very impressed by Australia. He wrote in his diary on March 14 1836: ‘Fairwell Australia, you are a rising infant and doubtless some day will reign as a great princess of the South. But you are too great and ambitious for affection, yet not great enough to respect; I leave your shores without sorrow or regret.’ The table below gives a list of the specimens which Darwin collected or mentioned during his time in Australia: Group Species/type Where mammal platypus NSW potoroo NSW bush rat NSW parrots – probably eastern and crimson rosellas and king parrots NSW birds sulfur crested-cockatoo Australian raven magpie and/or currawong reptiles oak skink Tas blue tongue lizard four other lizards tiger snake amphibians southern frog WA fish 20 species WA Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 23 insects molluscs 92 species from five different orders from around Sydney, including: beetles, ant lions (lacewing larvae) NSW dung beetles Tas oysters NSW trochid shells whelk sand snail whelk Tas periwinkle amber shell top shell crustacea barnacles TAS plants Casuarina (she oaks) NSW tree ferns grass trees WA He also commented on the fact that native trees were not deciduous and on the great height of the gums trees on Mt Wellington in Tasmania While in Australia, Darwin commented on the similarity between Australian marsupials and animals from the northern hemisphere. It is thought that it was in Australia that Darwin began to think about the evolution of species. It is interesting to note that Darwin made the following comment in his Journal in relation to native species in the face of European settlement: ‘It may be long before these animals are altogether exterminated, but their doom is fixed’ He may have been a bit too severe in his predictions, but at least 17 species of native mammals have become extinct in Australia since European settlement. 24 Evolution of Australian biota Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN St Helena Ascension Is Western Is Cape of Good Hope Mauritius Bourbon Is INDIAN OCEAN Keeling I King George’s Sound Hobart Sydney Bay of Islands SOUTH PACIFIC OCEAN Tahiti Society Is Galapagos Is Cape Horn Valparaiso Falkland Is Port Desire Montevideo Rio de Janeiro Bahia Gill Sans Bold The voyage of the Beagle. Darwin returns to England The HMS Beagle returned to England by the Mauritius, Cape of Good Hope (South Africa), the Ascension Islands and Bahia in Brazil by 2 October 1836. 25 After that time, Darwin worked in London preparing his specimens and writing his publications from the research on his voyage (ten books in all, including two editions of his research journals.) Darwin married in January 1839 and subsequently moved to Kent, where he became something of a recluse. However, he continued to work on his writing and the formulation of his thoughts on evolution by means of natural selection, this had mainly been written and discussed with colleagues by 1842. In June 1858, Darwin was overwhelmed when he received a letter from Alfred Russel Wallace, a biologist working in south-east Asia who had come up with the same idea as Darwin for how evolution might take place – he also even called it natural selection! Darwin offered to arrange for Wallace’s work to be published but his friends and colleagues wanted Darwin also to receive credit and so organised the presentation of both their ideas at a scientific meeting of the Linnean Society of London on 1 July 1858. Darwin subsequently published his book On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection in 1859. The title of Darwin’s famous book is often abbreviated to the Origin of Species. It was an immediate best seller and of course was very controversial because it appeared to go against the teachings of the church, which still held that species were created by God and then remained unchanged. Darwin left it mainly to his scientific colleagues to argue his ideas in the scientific community and in public. One of the most famous arguments was the debate between his friend Thomas Huxley and Bishop Wilberforce. You will examine this in some detail later in the module. Unfortunately, the public became mainly interested in the idea arising from Darwin’s work that humans probably evolved from apes. This was really just a side issue to the culmination of Darwin’s work. Darwin’s greatest contribution to biology was in using a host of information, much of which he had gathered during his famous voyage on the Beagle, to explain how the mechanism of natural selection could drive the process of evolution of new species from previously existing species – the theory which others, including Darwin’s own grandfather, had proposed much earlier. His Zoology of the Voyage of HMS Beagle (1838-1843) and two editions of Journals of Research (1839 and 1845) had been best selling books. Although he was apparently in quite poor health for much of his life after returning from his voyage, Charles Darwin lived to 73 years of age and died on 19 April 1882. 26 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Darwin’s idea of natural selection Probably the first thing that gave Darwin the idea of natural selection acting on variations within a population was something which humans have been doing since they gave up being nomadic and began to live in settlements – humans began domesticating animals and plants and selected the types which best suit our needs. This process of artificial selection meant that, starting with native grasses, which produced only small seeds and little flour, the current grain crops (eg. wheat, oats, barley, rye), were bred which yielded much more flour when crushed. We have been able to produce breeds of sheep which produce more wool than they need to keep warm and cows which produce more milk than would normally be needed to feed their calves. A good example of how artificial selection can work is seen in breeds of dogs, ranging from Great Danes to miniature poodles. Originally, wolf pups would have been adopted into human settlements. Obviously ones which grew up to be aggressive and dangerous would have been released or killed, but more docile variations among the pups would have been selected to breed again. Over a number of generations these wolves would have become quite domesticated. Other features could also have been selected, such as an ability to herd cattle and to hunt or track species used for human food. Today we have selected for a variety of physical features which we find appealing in our dogs. Domestic dogs are the same species as the wolf (Canis lupus) but they have been changed genetically due to artificial selection. Canis lupus familiaris is a sub species of the wolf species. Both Darwin and Wallace realised that the environment perhaps could select the ‘best’ variations in a species and that this natural selection could lead to the evolution of new species. During his voyage, Darwin was impressed by the similarities of fossil and living organisms from different parts of the world. He noted that there were slight differences between these, which he could often relate to the habitats in which they lived. One example was a group of small birds of the Galapagos – the finches. Darwin found that on different islands, or in different habitats on the same island, populations of finches had beak shape and sizes which adapted them to a particular food source. There are large, heavy beaks for crushing large seeds; sharp beaks for extracting grubs from rotting wood, small delicate beaks for picking up tiny seeds from shrubs and so on. The following diagram shows some of the variation in beak shapes in ‘Darwin’s finches’. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 27 Different beak structures in finches found on different islands in the Galapagos. This illustrates how the species has diverged from the original form. Current thinking is that these finches probably evolved from one or two species which were originally blown by wind across from the mainland of South America, 950 km away. Various populations adapted differently. This was due to the influence of different natural selection pressures on the different islands. Eventually these groups became new species. The original ancestral species had given rise to new species under the influence of natural selection. You will pursue this idea in more detail in later parts of this module. Why were the ideas so controversial? When he was in Australia, Darwin noted the similarities of the platypus and the water vole of England both these animals were adapted for swimming. He also discussed the fact that the lacewing larva, (or ant lion, in Australia,) which was definitely a different species from that in Europe, had the same feeding methods. Both animals buried backwards into dry soil producing conical holes into which their prey stumbled and were eaten. In his Diary, Darwin suggested that surely such similar adaptations in different species of animals living in similar environments, but in different parts of the world, indicated that ‘one hand’ must be involved in producing such similarities. Some people suggest that these entries in his diary are perhaps an early statement by Darwin of the idea of natural selection acting. It seems an obscure reference, but remembering that Darwin realised that his diary could be read by devoutly religious friends and family back in England, he could have been wording his ideas in a non-controversial manner. The ‘one hand’ could have been interpreted as meaning the hand of God or the action of natural selection. We will never know, but it is an intriguing aspect of his time in Australia, where we know he did less biology than in other places and left our ‘shores without sorrow or regret’. 28 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Darwin’s ideas were considered controversial because they went against the belief held by the church at the time that all species were created by God. As a result, the notion that current species evolved from ancestral species as a result of natural selection was not acceptable to many Christians. Darwin himself knew how controversial they would be, as he came from a devout Church of England background, and was married to a woman who was deeply religious. This is probably the main reason that it took so long for him to make his ideas public and was only really inspired to make them public by the letter from Wallace in 1858. He had discussed his ideas with many colleagues in person and by letter long before this time. Now do Exercise 1.2. The Huxley – Wilberforce debate As mentioned earlier, Darwin was ill for much of his later life and left it to colleagues to argue his ideas in public and in the scientific community. This included the famous debate between Darwin’s friend Thomas Huxley and Bishop Samuel Wilberforce at Oxford University in June 1860, where both of these speakers scored points of debate against each other. Wilberforce, reflecting the idea that Darwin’s theory led to the conclusion that humans had ultimately evolved from a primate ancestor, supposedly asked Huxley if he traced his ape ancestry back to his grandfather’s or grandmother’s side of the family. Huxley apparently replied that he would rather be related to an ape than to a man who used his position, eloquence and a few hours acquaintance with biology to ridicule a theory which he did not understand! However, in reality the nature and outcome of the whole debate is in dispute as no transcript of it was recorded. There have been numerous reconstructions of it since, most of which have Huxley ‘winning’ the debate, while others give the win to Wilberforce or call it as a ‘draw’. Much of Bishop Wilberforce’s criticism was later published in a scientific journal and were aimed at Darwin’s methods and reasoning. The debate is often represented as being between supporters of Darwin’s theory and the beliefs of the Church, but in reality the debate was of no great consequence to the acceptance of Darwin’s theory. There was already a range of reactions for and against the theory of evolution in both religious and scientific circles. In Australia for Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 29 example the reaction to Origin of Species was initially fairly hostile, but Darwin was actively supported by the geologist W B Clarke who was also a minister of the Church of England. Some of Wilberforce’s criticisms are still levelled at the theory of evolution, particularly by those supporting the idea of special creation, but biological studies since Darwin’s time have collected information relating to these criticisms. Listed below are five of Wilberforce’s criticisms of Darwin’s ideas. • Although we can observe change occurring within species (eg. breeds of dogs) no one has observed it leading to the appearance of a new species, even in organisms like bacteria which reproduce very quickly. • If earlier groups of organisms gave rise to later ones through the process of evolution there should be intermediate or transitional fossil forms found in the fossil record. • There are such gaps in the fossil record so it is not possible to trace ancestry of many species. • It might be reasonable to argue that simple variations in a population (eg. colour in peppered moth) will be selected by the environment but what about the evolution of complex organs, like the eye of vertebrates? How could such a complex structure have evolved due to natural selection? • Darwin indicated the reason that we cannot see new species actually evolving is because the process takes such a long time but it is scientifically inaccurate to simply say that, given enough time, a process which cannot be observed will take place. It has been said that Darwin did not follow the normal scientific approach of making hypotheses and then testing them, but rather took the approach of collecting information and then sitting down to work out what it all meant. Such an approach is quite acceptable, as it often leads to hypotheses which are able to be tested by experimentation or further investigation. This is in fact what has happened. Other biologists have tested hypotheses arising from Darwin’s theory of evolution. This has led to a refinement of his theory over the years and you will examine this in more detail in a later module in the HSC course. Complete the following questions, then check your answers at the back of this part. 30 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold 1 Darwin worked out his theory of evolution by using the following scientific approach. A) Proposing hypotheses and then going out to collect data to test these. B) Making up a theory and then looking at all of the data he had to see if the data supported the theory. C) Collecting a range of data and then deriving a theory from the data. D) Producing a theory by using second hand data collected from the observations of other scientists. 2 During his voyage on the Beagle Darwin gathered most of his scientific data in South America and the Galapagos Islands. The Beagle also visited Australia where: A) Darwin spent most of his time socialising after his long time at sea B) the weather was so bad that he could not do any biological collecting C) many organisms had already been described and studied so Darwin did not bother to collect more D) Darwin collected a number of specimens and possibly began to formulate his ideas on natural selection. 3 The famous debate between Bishop Wilberforce and Thomas Huxley is often suggested as being an important event in the history of development of the theory of evolution. Which of the following is the most correct statement of the importance of the debate? A) Thomas Huxley convinced all at the debate that Darwin’s ideas were more acceptable than the idea of special creation. B) The event was telecast world wide. Millions of people saw it and Darwin’s ideas gained international acceptance overnight. C) As it was not transcribed there have been lots of different interpretations of what was actually said and so it is probably of little consequence. D) Wilberforce suggested that Huxley was related to an ape and Huxley said that he preferred that to being related to a bishop. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 31 4 Some of the criticisms of Darwin’s ideas raised by Bishop Wilberforce in his review of the Origin of Species are still considered today to be weaknesses of the theory of evolution. In your own words outline three of these criticisms. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Check your answers. In your syllabus you are asked to present information form secondary sources to discuss the Huxley-Wilberforce debate on Darwin’s theory of evolution. There is some information that you can use above and there are some Internet sites on the Science Online webpage. http://www.lmpc.edu.au/science Now turn to Exercise 1.3 where you will discuss the Huxley – Wilberforce debate on Darwin’s theory of evolution. 32 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Summary • Variations or differences within a species are produced by the processes of: - mutation (inheritable changes in genetic material) - gamete production (meiosis) - variety of gametes possible at fertilisation. • Natural selection acts on variations within populations or species to produce changes in the characteristics within the group. • Natural selection is the mechanism which Darwin and Wallace suggested was causing changes within populations. • Natural selection is this mechanism which also leads to pesticide resistance in insects and antibiotic resistance in bacteria • Over long periods of geological time, and with different selection pressures on geographically isolated groups of the same organisms in different environments, the evolution of new species (speciation) and new groups of species occurs. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 33 34 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Additional resources Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 35 36 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Suggested answers Genetic variation The processes that lead to genetic variation within a species are: • mutation • assortment of chromosomes during gamete production (meiosis) • exchange of chromosome parts (crossing over) during meiosis • combination of genes produced by fertilisation in sexual reproduction. 1 B is correct. It is the best adapted species which survive and pass on their genetic variation to their offspring 2 B again is correct. Although radiation is a cause of some mutations, a mutation is best defined as a genetic change within an individual. 3 Variation permits natural selection to occur so that a population or species might survive a change because of a beneficial variation being present. Adaptive radiation 1 A Factors in the environment, such as disease, predation, and weather permit the best adapted individuals within a population to survive and to reproduce. This is often referred to as ‘the survival of the fittest’. 2 B When groups of the same species are geographically separated in different places (which have different environments) different natural selection pressures produce change which can result in speciation. 3 D The idea of evolution had been proposed by a number of people before Darwin, including his grandfather, but the main contribution of Darwin and Wallace was to propose a mechanism by which the process took place. That mechanism is natural selection. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 37 4 As groups of species became geographically isolated from each other due to geological changes they were exposed to different environmental selection pressures, especially different climates, and evolved into new species or groups of species. Experiment 2: Predator observations 1 You would expect that a greater number of the less well adapted variation (the less camouflaged light moths) would be seen being taken by the birds (the selecting agent). 2 Yes, these results do give some support to the hypothesis. 3 You would really need to set up a control observation in a nonindustrialised area to be sure that the birds were taking the colour variation least well adapted to the particular environment and that they were not just showing a preference in their feeding behaviour for light coloured moths. In fact, Kettlewell did do this and the results are shown in the table below: Industrial area Non-industrial area Dark variation 15 taken by birds 164 taken by birds Light variation 43 taken by birds 26 taken by birds Charles Darwin 38 1 C It is probable that Darwin had been thinking about the idea of evolution but it seems that it is likely that he derived his theory after his experiences and collection of data on his voyages. A is the approach we most often think of about as being ‘good’ science but it is not the only acceptable scientific approach. Many biologists have proposed hypotheses based on Darwin’s ideas and have done experiments or field studies to test these hypotheses. 2 D Darwin did in fact do a good deal of socialising in Australia but also did quite a bit of collecting. He possibly thought about natural selection leading to the Australian ant lions behaving like those from Europe and there being superficial similarities between the platypus and the British water vole. 3 C There have been lots of articles written about the debate, most of which come up with different accounts of what probably happened. The idea that Darwin’s ideas triumphed over those of the Church seems unlikely. Wilberforce’s review of Origin of Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Species, which may have been a large part of his speech at the debate was even accepted by Darwin, who wrote: ‘I have just read the Quarterly [scientific journal in which the review was published]. It is uncommonly clever; it picks out with skill all of the most conjectural parts, and brings forward well all the difficulties’. 4 Go back to the list given in the section on the HuxleyWilberforce debate in the module notes to check your answer. The apparent weaknesses of the modern theory of evolution will be discussed in the HSC course. In spite of some weaknesses the theory is the best we have to explain scientifically how evolution may have taken place. This idea was stated by Huxley during the debate, where he reputedly said something like: ‘Without asserting that every part of the theory has been confirmed, [Huxley] maintained that this was the best explanation of the origin of species which has yet been offered’ The Athanaeum, 14 July 1860. Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 39 40 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Exercises - Part 1 Exercises 1.1 to 1.3 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 1.1: Genetic variation Search your local area for two species to measure. You don’t need to just stick to size, you might be able to count the numbers of stripes on shells, numbers with different patterns of markings, different coloured flowers, leaf length, numbers of leaves and so on. Make your measurements and write up your results as a report using the following headings. Introduction: What are you going to do? _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Hypothesis: What do you expect to happen? _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 41 Method: How did you carry out your experiment? _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Results: What did you observe? Record your figures, tabulate and graph them and then describe patterns you observe. 42 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Discussion: Did your results support or go against your hypothesis. What other factors may have affected your results? _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Exercise 1.2: Darwin Using an example from your knowledge of Darwin’s activities and observations during his time in Australia, explain how his experiences may have contributed to his ideas in evolution of organisms. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 43 Exercise 1.3: Huxley – Wiberforce debate In their debate, it seems that Huxley argued Darwin’s ideas of natural selection and the evolution of new species and groups from common ancestry. Wilberforce on the other hand, criticised these ideas. Use the material from this Part and additional information to answer the following questions. a) Outline two pieces of evidence which may have been used by Huxley in the debate to support Darwin’s ideas. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ b) Outline two weaknesses in Darwin’s proposed theory which Wilberforce may have pointed out in the debate. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ c) Analyse the importance of the idea of natural selection to the theory of evolution. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 44 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold d) During its geological history over the 35-45 million years since it split from Gondwana, parts of Australia have had different climates and have been isolated from each other by inland seas or by areas of extremely arid conditions. Using your understanding of how new species are formed, explain how such climatic differences and geographic separation could have lead to changes in the flora and fauna of Australia. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 1: New species and the theory of evolution 45 Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 0 20 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Layers of the Earth .................................................................... 4 Major crust plates .................................................................................5 Plate tectonics........................................................................... 9 Break up of ancient supercontinents.................................................10 Evidence for the theory ......................................................................11 Additional resources................................................................ 25 Exercises – Part 2 .................................................................. 33 Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 1 Introduction In the first part of this module the theory of evolution was discussed, particularly in relation to the evolution of the biota of Australia. The evolutionary processes were seen to result from the isolation of groups of ancestral organisms. This was followed by these groups changing under the influence of natural selection over long periods of time. The theory of plate tectonics explains how this could have come about. That is, by the northerly movement of the Australian land mass over long periods of geological time. In this part of the module the theory of plate tectonics is discussed and its implications for the evolution of the Australian biota are considered. In Part 2 you will be given opportunities to learn to: • 2 identify and describe evidence that supports the assertion that Australia was once part of a landmass called Gondwana including: – matching continent margins – position of mid-ocean ridges – spreading zones between continental plates – fossils in common on Gondwanan continents, including Glossopteris and Gangamopteris flora and the marsupials – similarities between present day organisms on Gondwanan continents Evolution of Australian biota In this part you will be given opportunities to: • solve problems to identify the positions of mid-ocean ridges and spreading zones that infer a moving Australian continent. • identify data sources, gather process, analyse and present information from secondary sources to draw up a timeline that identifies key events in the formation of Australia as an island from its origins as part of Gondwana Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 3 Layers of the Earth The Earth consists of a sphere made up of a series of layers. The mantle and the crust surround the central core. These layers are shown in the diagram below. lithosphere (rigid solid) oceanic crust 100 km continental crust 700 km upper mantle inner core 1216 km outer core asthenosphere (capable of flow) mantle 2270 km 2185 km upper mantle 700 km 6371 km Layers of the Earth. 4 Evolution of Australian biota The crust is the layer that is of most interest in this module. The crust forming the land areas of the Earth is called the continental crust. It is between 20 to 80 km thick. Under the oceans is the oceanic crust that is 5 to 15 km thick). This relatively thin crust is brittle and cracked like an egg shell into separate plates. These plates are generally made up of a mix of both continental and oceanic crust. Both types of crust slide over the semi-molten upper layer of the mantle called the asthenosphere. Because the crust is made up of separate plates and these plates are free to move over the asthenosphere, it is possible for these plates to move with respect to one another. Of course, this does present problems. How can the solid plates of the crust move with respect to one another? The answer lies in the nature of the different crustal plate boundaries. Major crust plates The crust of today is broken up into 12 major rigid plates. These plates are shown and named on the figure below. Plate boundry uncertain Eurasion Plate ch tian n Tre u Ale North American Plate Basin and Range Province San Andreas Fault Him ala ys Caribbean Plate Arabian Plate Philippine plate Caroline Plate Ja va tren ch Mid Atla ntic Cocos plate Pacific Plate Rise African Plate Nazca Plate South American Plate Ea st Pacific Indian-Australian plate ridg e Scotia Plate Antarctic Plate Antarctic Plate The Earth's major crust plates. Lines with arrow heads indicate subduction zones. The arrow heads show the direction of plate movement. The offset or jagged thin lines within oceans are divergent margins. Note: Don’t worry about remembering all the plate names, the Australian-India Plate (or Indian-Australian) is the one which is of most interest. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 5 Plate boundaries The edges of these plates exist as one of three different types of plate boundary. Each type of plate boundary is characterised by different features and events that occur at the boundary. For simplicity geologists who study plate boundaries describe them as follows. Divergent (spreading) boundaries. These form where plates are moving apart such as to the south of Australia at the present time or where plates are splitting such as in east Africa. Today divergent boundaries are mainly found on the floor of oceans. At divergent boundaries molten rock rises up to fill the space created by the plates moving apart. The accumulation of this upwelling molten material forms a volcanic mountain range if it occurs under the ocean and forms new oceanic crust at mid-ocean ridges. The mountain range is constantly rifted apart and forms a rift valley along the mid-ocean ridge. ocean crust mid-ocean ridge rift continental crust A divergent boundary with a mid-ocean ridge. Divergent boundaries form new oceans or renew the crust in old oceans. This ensures that the crust of an ocean basin is a maximum of around 200 million years old. Convergent boundaries These occur where plates collide with each other and one of the plates that is denser is forced under the other. You may have already guessed that if you are making new oceanic crust and splitting plates apart at divergent plate boundaries you must be destroying crust somewhere else otherwise the size of the Earth is expanding. Convergent boundaries can involve different types of situations. ∑ 6 Subduction boundaries. These occur where a denser oceanic plate collides with a less dense oceanic or continental plate. Evolution of Australian biota oceanic crust 100 km 200 km oceanic trench subducting oce ani c lit hos asthenosphere p he volcanic arc continental crust asthenosphere re melting continental lithosphere ∑ The denser crustal plate is forced down under the less dense plate creating a trench adjacent to the collision zone. This generally results in volcanoes arising at the edge of the less dense plate. ∑ This type of boundary occurs at the South American and Nazca plate boundary in Chile and Peru. It has resulted in the volcanoes of the Andes Mountains and the formation of the Peru-Chile trench on the west coast of South America. ∑ Oceanic crust can also be subducted beneath other plates made of oceanic crust. This occurs to the north east of New Zealand along a structure known as the Tonga- Kermadec Trench. Crust is destroyed at subduction zones. oceanic crust 100 km 200 km oceanic trench subducting oce ani c lit hos asthenosphere p he island arc re melting ∑ continental crust asthenosphere continental lithosphere Continental collision boundaries occur where two continental plates collide. This results in mountain formation. The most prominent example of this occurring is where the plate India is attached to is colliding and being forced under the Eurasian Plate. The mountain range that has formed as a result is the tallest in the world today, the Himalayas. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 7 100 km 200 km asthenosphere Continental lithosphere Continental lithosphere Closer to home the highlands of New Guinea were formed when the Australian-India (Indo-Australian) plate collided with the largely oceanic plates to its north. Transform fault boundaries These boundaries form where plates are moving past each other. At transform faults crust is neither created nor destroyed. This occurs along the north-south axis of New Zealand, where the Pacific and Indo-Australian plates move past each other. This structure is the Alpine Fault. Another well known transform fault occurs on the west coast of the USA. Part of this fault is the famous San Andreas Fault that runs through California. fault plane A transform fault boundary The driving force of plate tectonics is trench pull and trench push. Look at the map of the major crust plates shown previously and locate each of the features and plates discussed. Complete Exercise 2.1. 8 Evolution of Australian biota Plate tectonics The idea that landmasses drifted across the face of the Earth was first seriously suggested by Alfred Wegener in 1912 in his theory of continental drift. He proposed the idea that continents moved around the globe because he could see no other way to explain the reason for the similarities in rocks, fossils and other geological features on either side of the Atlantic Ocean. Much of Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift was based on the apparent geographic fit of the bulge of eastern South America and the western coast of Africa. He even went as far as to envision a single great landmass, Pangaea, which supposedly began to separate in the Triassic Period around 250 to 208 million years ago. Wegener had no mechanism to explain how the continents could be moved so his theory of continental drift was thought to be rubbish by most scientists. Wegener’s hypothesis languished for the next four decades though the observations he had made supporting continental drift remained unexplained. In 1962 Harold Hess of the USA suggested that convection currents in the molten part of the mantle were the driving force for the movement of continents. He suggested that new sea floor is created at mid-ocean ridges and spreads away from them as it ages. Sam Carey of Tasmania suggested the concept of a subduction zone in the late 1950s. Neither had any direct evidence for these ideas and both were criticised for a nonscientific approach to a problem. Their hypotheses were important as over the following two decades evidence would show their ideas to be largely correct. Until the 1990’s it was assumed that convection was the sole driver of plate motion with slow movement of the mantle dragging the overlying plates along with it. Since 1994 the ideas of Professor Seiya Uyeda (Tokai University, Japan) that subduction is the major driver of plate motion are becoming increasingly popular. Professor Uyeda’s arguments are simple. The subducting dense slab literally drags the plate behind it along. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 9 There may well be some contribution from convection currents in this motion and some wedging apart of plates in a process known as ridge push but this contribution is difficult to quantify. Interestingly much debate is occurring today on this concept and it still remains a controversial question in geology. In doing any reading on the subject be aware that Professor Uyeda first published his ideas in 1994. Older books will therefore not consider trench pull as a mechanism of plate motion. This is a case of an idea in science being born and gaining in impetus. It is still not universally accepted. Now you will look at the evidence that has turned the concept of continental drift into the theory of plate tectonics. Break up of ancient supercontinents From around 280 mya all of the major current northern and southern hemisphere continents were joined into one landmass called Pangaea. Gondwana formation About 225 mya Pangaea began to break up as the crustal plates began to move apart. The first division was between the northern supercontinent (Laurasia) and the southern giant landmass of which Australia was part. This southern supercontinent is called Gondwana (or Gondwanaland). Separation was not immediate and took close to 50 million years to complete. During this time there was a northward drift and slight anticlockwise rotation of the Gondwanan continent. Africa South America Madagascar India Australia Antarctia Gondwana is the former supercontinent in the southern hemisphere. It included South America, Africa, peninsular India, Australia and Antarctica. The name Gondwanaland was coined by the Austrian geologist Eduard Suess who named it from the Upper Paleozoic and Mesozoic formations 10 Evolution of Australian biota of the Gondwana region of central India, which display typical developments of many of the shared geologic features that are evident on all separated fragments of the former supercontinent. Separation of Gondwana Gondwana finally separated from Laurasia around 170 mya and then it began to break up around 100 mya into the current continental arrangement. The isolation of Australia About 45-35 mya the Indo-Australian plate finally broke away from Antarctica completely and drifted north, colliding with the plates of south-east Asia about 15 mya. To see an animation of the break up of Pangaea to the present day configuration of continents see the Biology page of the science website at: http://www.lmpc.edu.au/science Evidence for the theory The theory of plate tectonics, like Darwin’s theory of evolution, became accepted as evidence was collected for its support. Although it is not necessary in a biology course to investigate this evidence thoroughly, it is important to understand why the theory is now widely accepted, as its implications are important to evolutionary biology (considered in Parts 1 and 3 of this module.) The evidence that you will be considering is: • matching continent margins • position of mid-ocean ridges • spreading zones between continental plates • fossils in common on Gondwanan continents, including Glossopteris and Gangamopteris flora and the marsupials • similarities between present day organisms on Gondwanan continents. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 11 Matching continent margins Evidence to support this theory came from the jigsaw fit of the shape of continents. By the 1600s much of the world's landmasses had been mapped. In 1620 Francis Bacon pointed out the similarities in shape between the continents on either side of the Atlantic Ocean. As well as visibly matching further research found that the margins of the continents shared other similarities such as the type and age of rocks and the presence of earthquakes and volcanoes along the continental margins. Rock types The continents are not a perfect jigsaw fit, and so you might reject the idea that they were once joined into one continent. However, geological investigations have shown similarities in rock types between Africa and South America. The figure below shows some similarities in rock formations between the two continents (the same rock formations are shown by the same shading on both continents.) The probable position of South America and Africa in Gondwana. Areas of similar rock types shared between the two continents are shown as shaded areas. One problem with simply matching coastlines of continents is that the continental shelves are the true boundaries of the continents. 12 Evolution of Australian biota Earthquakes and volcanoes Earthquakes and volcano patterns provide additional evidence for locating and determining the nature of plate boundaries. When the earthquake epicentres (where the earthquake actually occurred) are plotted on a map they form narrow zones that delineate the edges of crustal plates. Areas of volcanic activity are also found along plate boundaries. This is a bit like a complicated join-the-dots puzzle. The map following shows the location of the Earth’s volcanoes. Try to join up the dots on the map, as they should show the crustal plate boundaries. Location of the Earth's volcanoes. Is it a bit hard to do? It should help if you look at the next map, which shows the epicentres of earthquakes. Remember that both earthquakes and volcanic activity occur along plate boundaries. How did you go this time mapping the plate boundaries? Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 13 Earthquake locations on the surface of the Earth There are a few volcanoes and earthquakes areas found away from plate boundaries, but overall the earthquake and volcanic zones are a good fit for the plate boundaries. Some volcanoes form in lines or chains away from the crust boundaries such as the Hawaiian-Emperor Seamount chain and the line of extinct volcanoes on the eastern extent of mainland Australia eg. the Warrumbungles, Mt Kapatur, Mt Warning and the Glasshouse Mountains. These are thought to have formed as the plate moved over a stationary hot spot in the mantle that literally burned its way through the crust periodically. The fact that these mountains in the chains each become older in one direction suggests the plate on which they formed is moving over the hotspot and supports the concept of crustal plate movement. Age of rocks Ages of rocks on continental margins that were thought to have been joined support continental drift. When the ages of rocks are determined by radiometric dating methods and compared across continents, the ages of rocks on the margins, that were probably joined to each other, are the same and therefore could have been attached to each other as the theory suggests. 14 Evolution of Australian biota Position of mid-ocean ridges The ocean floor is not flat. As same as on the land, there are plains, mountains and valleys. Mid-ocean ridges are volcanic mountain chains. They rise kilometres above the deep-sea ocean floor and are over 50 000 kilometres long. They are the longest chains of volcanoes on the planet. They are formed by the plates spreading. As the plates move apart the gap is filled with magma. The evidence for the position of mid-ocean ridges comes from magnetism and radiometric dating of the sea floor. Magnetism The structure and age of magnetic anomalies adjacent to apparent divergent margin zones around Australia suggest a history of sea floor spreading and the path of the Australian continent’s drift. Early in the 20th century, palaeomagnetists such as Bernard Brunhes in France and Motonari Matuyama in Japan studied the Earth's ancient magnetic field. They recognised that igneous rocks like basalt (that make up most of the ocean floors basement rocks) belong to two groups according to their magnetic properties. One group has normal polarity. That is, the magnetic minerals in the rock have the same polarity as that of the Earth’s present magnetic field. This would result in the north end of the rocks ‘compass needle’ pointing toward magnetic north. The other group of rocks, however, have magnetic minerals with reversed polarity, indicated by a polarity alignment opposite to that of the Earth's present magnetic field. In this case, the north end of the rocks compass needle would point south. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 15 Mid-ocean ridge 3 2 lithosphere 1 1 2 3 magma Stripes 1, 2 and 3 are the same age either side of the Mid-ocean ridge normal magnetic polarity reversed magnetic polarity Magnetic polarity of the sea floor. Scientists wondered how this could be? This answer was simple. Grains of magnetite behave like little magnets and can align themselves with the orientation of the Earth's magnetic field. When molten rock containing minerals and gases cools to form solid volcanic rock, the alignment of the magnetite grains is locked in recording the Earth's magnetic orientation or polarity as normal or reversed at the time of the rocks cooling. During the 1950s as the sea floor was mapped using sensitive magnetometers that record the polarity of seafloor rocks. The magnetic stripes or magnetic variations turned out to be common recognisable patterns. In fact, these magnetic patterns over the ocean floor showed a zebra-like pattern. Alternating stripes of magnetically different polarity rock were laid out in rows on either side of mid-ocean ridges. These became known as magnetic anomaly patterns. The meaning of these magnetic stripes was finally determined by Vine and Matthews from Cambridge University in Britain in the 1960s, but not before two United States scientists Cox and Dalrymple studying magnetic reversals on land, developed a time scale of magnetic reversals. Vine and Mathews combined the magnetic time scale of reversals and the magnetic stripes on the ocean floor to show that the rate of spreading of the sea floor from the mid-ocean ridge divergent margin could be determined from magnetic stripe patterns. 16 Evolution of Australian biota Ocean floor dating Sediments containing fossils that can be easily dated increase in thickness and maximum age on either side of a mid-ocean ridge as the distance from the ridge increases. This suggests the points most distant from the mid-ocean ridge are the oldest and the points at the ridge are the youngest. Radiometric dating of the ocean floor rarely shows an age in excess of 200 million years suggesting that the sea floor is very young and often recycled compared to continental crust. The radiometric ages of sea floor also increases away from the ridge. Spreading zones between continental plates Evidence for sea floor spreading comes from exploration from deep-sea submersibles. In 1977 an expedition near the Galapagos Islands discovered hydrothermal vents. The importance of this discovery was that the existence of these areas had been hypothesised but never before seen. It was a location where new planetary crust is formed as the injection of new basalt moves the plates apart. This discovery was followed by the discovery of ‘black smokers’. These are areas where superheated water is discharged from the sea floor loaded with sulfides. These precipitate as they hit the cooler water and have the appearance of black smoke, thus the name. The discovery was exciting because at these sites there is whole community of living organisms relying on chemosynthesis as a basis for life. Fossils in common on Gondwanan continents Fossils provide some evidence of continents being joined or separate in the past. If the continents were joined at some stage, you would expect that fossils or ancestral groups of present day organisms, or even living representatives in common would be found in the modern continents that made up the previous supercontinent. Similarly, if a species or group evolved on one of the continents after it had broken away from the supercontinent, you wouldn’t expect to find it on the other separated continent. The evidence from fossils supports these expectations. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 17 Fossils of ancient Glossopterid plants (eg. genera Glossopteris and Gangamopteris), which evolved around 280 mya, are found in Australia, Antarctica, South America and also in India. Remember that India was also once part of Gondwana. Fossils of Glossopteris. (Photo © LMP Tim Reid) Similarities between present day organisms on Gondwanan continents Plant and animal distribution on modern continents supports the concept of continental drift having taken place. The widespread distribution of many species of plants and animals either as living organisms or as fossils on separate continents suggest a link in the past. The kauris, Norfolk Island pine, Hoop pine, Bunya pine and the recently discovered Wollemi pine, belong to the plant family Araucariaceae, which occurs in Australia, New Zealand and South America. 18 Evolution of Australian biota Araucaria luxurians found on New Caledonia. (Photo: Jane West) Close-up of a Wollemi pine. (Photo: Jane West) The King Billy and Pencil pines from Tasmania are species from the redwood family, which is mainly found in the northern hemisphere. The ratite birds include ostriches of Africa, the rheas of South America, the emus and cassowaries of Australia and the kiwis (and extinct moas) of New Zealand. The occurrence of bird species is often not a good indicator of affinities between landmasses, as they can reach very distant areas by flying. However, the large ratite birds could not have flown to colonise the newly divided continents and so indicate that the continents were once joined. The southern beech trees (Nothofagus) were also found throughout Gondwana before it broke up. Living species of Nothofagus currently occur in Australia, New Zealand, New Caledonia, New Guinea and South America. Fossil pollen of Nothofagus has also been found in Antarctica. Some animal groups have been found as living species in Africa, South America and Australia. For example, the ratite birds (mainly large flightless species) and lungfishes. Others, which presumably evolved after Africa had split from Gondwana, include the parrots, gecko lizards, some bird species. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 19 Many species of vertebrate animals that inhabited Gondwana have left descendants in the separate continents that once made up the supercontinent, including Australia. These include the marsupials and monotremes. Marsupials are pouched mammals that occur mainly in Australia. Other Gondwanan countries such as South America also have a range of marsupials. Marsupials and monotremes will be considered in more detail in the next part of the module. Collision with south-east Asia The Indo-Australian Plate is still carrying the Australian landmass north at a few centimetres per year. You now know that the Australian land mass has not always been in its current position, but was once grouped together with the other Gondwanan fragments into a supercontinent, which eventually split up as the component plates split apart and drifted in relation to each other. The question is what effect has this had on the Australian biota? When the Australian landmass came close to south-east Asia many species of organisms eventually found their way via the islands between the south-east Asian mainland and Australia. These immigrants included most of the rodents (rats and mice), the bats and the group to which most of the dangerous Australian snakes belong (family Elapidae). A number of groups of native biota have reached Australia in the last 15 million years, especially during the times of the ice ages, when sea levels fell and strips of land existed between many islands, including between New Guinea and northern Australia. Complete Exercise 2.2. The isolation of Australia About 45-35 mya the Indo-Australian plate finally broke away from Antarctica completely and drifted north, colliding with the plates of south-east Asia about 15 mya. To see an animation of the break up of Pangaea to the present day configuration of continents see the Biology page of the science website at: http://www.lmpc.edu.au/science The table below records the events that lead to the break-up of Pangaea and then Gondwana. As Gondwana broke up Australia became isolated from the other Gondwanan countries. 20 Evolution of Australian biota Era Period Epoch Time spans (million years) Quaternary Recent 10 000-today Pleistocene Cainozoic Tertiary Events 2 million-10 000 Pliocene 5-2 Miocene 25-5 Oligocene 40-25 Eocene 55-40 Paleocene 65-55 Cretaceous 140-65 Indo-Australian plate collides with south east Asia (approx.15 mya) Australia drifts north (approx.45 mya) separation of New Zealand and Lord Howe rise (approx. 80 mya) separation of India approx. 100 mya) Mesozoic Jurassic 210-140 separation of Africa (approx. 125 mya) rift between west and east Gondwana (approx. 150 mya) Pangaea rift from Gondwana (approx. 170 mya) Triassic 250-210 Permian 300-250 The first split was an unzipping of Gondwana from east to west approximately 150 million years ago. To the east were Antarctica, Australia and India. To the west was South America and Africa. Africa then separated from South America 125 mya. India moved away 100mya and New Zealand separated 80 mya. Australia separated from Antarctica 45 mya and collided with southeast Asia 15mya. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 21 Geological time line Because geological time is so immense it is often difficult to conceive the length between different periods. For that reason a timeline is a good tool to help you to visualise time. In the Additional resources section there is a timeline partially constructed for you. Use this or if you prefer make one yourself. The instructions for constructing your own are also in the Additional resources section. Here is a list of the things which you should put on your time line, but don’t limit yourself to the ones given (eg. you could note the time of the separation of Africa and India, or the time India crashed into the Eurasian plate): Start at the Permian period (about 300 mya), when Australia was still attached to the large supercontinent of Pangaea, through the separation of Gondwana and the progression of the separate Australian continent north until its collision with south-east Asia about 15 mya. On the timeline mark: • the important eras, periods and epochs (Permian, Triassic, Jurassic, cretaceous, tertiary, Quaternary • separation of Gondwana from the rest of Pangaea • separation of east (Antarctica, Australia, India) and west (South America, Africa) Gondwana • separation of New Zealand • separation of Australia • separation of south America • Indo-Australian plate colliding with south-east Asia. Note: you will need to refer to your notes and the Additional resources to do this exercise. This exercise will help you to become familiar with the timing and names of the geological periods and epochs, which aren’t easy to learn just on their own. All of the information you need to do this assignment are in the learning material of this part, but if you like you can consult other sources such as books, CD ROMs or the Internet. Two very useful references for this part may be available from your local, school, or TAFE library or they could get them for you. 22 Evolution of Australian biota • Lewis, G B. 1995. Plate Tectonics. Teacher Notes and Student Activities. Australian Geological Survey. Geoscience Education Record. • Lewis, G B. 1995. Time and Life. Geological time and Palaeontology. Teacher Notes and Student Activities. Australian Geological Survey. Geoscience Education Record. Complete Exercise 2.3. Send in your completed timeline. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 23 24 Evolution of Australian biota Additional resources Note: You can skip these steps and choose to use the prepared time line following. Instructions for making your own time line You will need to either get some continuous paper (eg. unwaxed kitchen paper or roll of wrapping paper) or stick A4 pages together. How long a piece of paper will you need? Remember that the Earth is about 4500 million years old but you don’t need to make your time line to cope with that length of time. You should start your time line at the beginning of the Permian Period (300-250 mya) when Australia was still part of the supercontinent of Pangaea. There are two ways of doing it: Method 1 Decide how many years you will allocate to each unit of measurement of your line. eg. 1 cm = 1 million years, your paper will need to be 3 m long (300 cm = 3 m) eg. 1 cm = 10 million years, your paper will need to be 0.3 m (30 cm) long (3000/10 cm = 30 cm = 0.3 m) 3 m might be a bit long to handle and 30 cm not long enough to fit things in, so you need to get something in between. Method 2 Decide how long your paper is going to be and then work out how many millions of years are represented by each unit of measurement. You can use the following equation to work it out: 1 cm will = 300/(length of paper in metres x 100) million years Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 25 If you decide that your paper will be 1.5 metres long then: 1 cm will = 300 / (1.5 m x 100) = 300 / 150 = 2 million years You now need to calculate the length of the period and then divide this by the numbers of millions of years equivalent to 1 cm on your time line: For example Permian period 300-250 mya = 50 million years Distance on time line = 30/2 = 15.0 cm Triassic period 250-210 mya = 40 million years Distance on time line = 40/2 = 20cm You will have to experiment a bit until you get a scale with which you are happy. The table following shows the main eras, periods and epochs along with their time span. By the end of this module you should be familiar with the order in which they occur and have some idea of how long they were. This is pretty well impossible to do immediately, but by the time you have worked through the learning materials and done the activities and assignments of this module you will find that it isn’t too hard. It is a bit like learning a language other than your own native one. The more you make use of it the better you get. 26 Evolution of Australian biota millions of years ago 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Join the next three pages together. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 27 28 Evolution of Australian biota Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 29 millions of years ago 200 190 180 170 160 150 140 130 120 110 100 Isolation of Australia time line 30 Evolution of Australian biota Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 31 millions of years ago 300 290 280 270 260 250 240 230 220 210 200 32 Evolution of Australian biota Exercise – Part 2 Exercise 2.1 to 2.3 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 2.1: Plate boundaries Volcanic activity and/or earthquake activity normally occur along plate boundaries. The diagram below shows a section of the crust that includes a convergent boundary a divergent boundary, and a transform fault boundary. Locate and circle each of these boundaries on the diagram. continental crust oceanic crust rift valley (divergent convergent boundary) boundary divergent boundary oceanic crust convergent boundary transform fault convection cells plate movement Exercise 2.2: Evidence for Gondwana The evidence for Australia being part of Gondwana comes from various sources including the ones given below. In each area give an example of a source of evidence. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 33 a) matching continent margins ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ b) position of mid-ocean ridges ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ c) spreading zones between continental plates ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ d) fossils in common on Gondwanan continents ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ e) similarities between present day organisms on Gondwanan continents. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ 34 Evolution of Australian biota Exercise 2.3 : Timeline Attach your completed time line and return to your teacher. Part 2: Plate tectonics and affinities of Australian biota 35 Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 0 20 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Geological time scale and biota ................................................ 4 Evidence of changing environments ...................................................5 The last 100 million years.......................................................... 9 Environmental change .........................................................................9 Adaptive radiation of marsupials ............................................. 13 Origin of marsupials ...........................................................................15 Origin and radiation of monotremes ........................................ 16 The megafauna ....................................................................... 18 Additional resources................................................................ 21 Suggested answers................................................................. 25 Exercises – Part 3 ................................................................... 27 Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 1 Introduction In Part 2 of this module you became familiar with the theory of plate tectonics and saw how it is related to the biota found on the separate continents which made up Gondwanaland (Gondwana), especially the Australian continent. In this part of the module the nature of changing environments during the northerly drift of Australia and the resultant effects on the evolution of ancient and modern flora and fauna are discussed. Most emphasis is given to the marsupial and monotreme mammals, as they are typically Australian biota. Although a large number of marsupial species also occurs in South America, the species are mainly very different from the Australian marsupials. Monotreme fossils have also been found in South America, but living monotremes are restricted in their distribution to Australia and New Guinea and most fossil monotremes have been found here. In this part of the module you will need to read and work carefully through the material provided, to practice important skills especially gathering, processing and analysing information from secondary sources. This means that you need to be able to research reference material, understand it and present conclusions based on your research. If you have access to a library, CD ROM or the Internet, you can read further than the material provided here. However, there is sufficient research information in the material provided for you to carry out the exercises and assignments and to achieve the competencies required. In Part 3 you will be given opportunities to learn to: 2 • discuss current research into the evolutionary relationships between extinct species, including megafauna and extant Australian species • identify and describe evidence of changing environments in Australia over millions of years • identify changes in the distribution of Australian species, as rainforests contracted and sclerophyll communities and grasslands spread, as indicated by fossil evidence Evolution of Australian biota • discuss current theories that provide a model for these changes. In Part 3 you will be given opportunities to: • gather information from secondary sources to describe some Australian fossils, where these fossils were found and use available evidence to explain how they contribute to the development of understanding about the evolution of species in Australia. • perform a first-hand investigation, gather information of named Australian fossil samples and use available evidence to identify similarities and differences between current and extinct Australian life forms. Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 3 Geological time scale and biota As you saw in Part 2, Australia was once part of the huge landmass of Pangaea and then of the southern supercontinent, Gondwanaland (Gondwana). Even before Gondwana split from Pangaea most of the major groups of plants and animals known today existed on the Earth. Although the fossil record shows that mammals, birds and probably the flowering plants had not yet risen to any prominence by the time Gondwana separated from the rest of the Pangaean landmass. The table in the Additional resources shows the categories of geological time for the Earth but these are not drawn to scale. All periods are shown as fairly similar sized boxes, but the time span of each period is given, along with the major plant and animal groups from each. The table also indicates when it is thought each group evolved, reached prominence in the fossil or living record and when some became extinct. You should not be concerned if other sources do not match exactly the one given in the table which has actually been constructed from several sources of information. The generally accepted progression of evolution, as deduced by various types of information (especially fossil evidence), will be the same or very similar in most of these sources. However, you may find small discrepancies. These may be due to differences in opinion or interpretation by authors or even to how recently the source has been written or updated. In Part 2 you saw that Australia’s association, firstly with the other land areas making up Pangaea, and then those bound up into Gondwana, resulted in the biota of the modern Australian continent showing some similarities to those of other areas of the world. However, after its rifting from Antarctica and its movement north with the drifting of the Indo-Australian Plate, Australia experienced considerable changes in both climate, geography and geology so that species of organisms which were present on the continent were isolated 4 Evolution of Australian biota and exposed to different natural selection pressures, so that they changed and evolved into the groups of organisms present today. The mechanisms of this speciation and adaptive radiation were discussed in detail in Part 1. If you need to, return briefly to your notes and assignments from Part 1 just to make yourself familiar again with these mechanisms and how they are thought to work. Evidence of changing environments No one was around to witness the changes occurring in world environments, but a good deal of information on palaeogeography (pre-human geography) and palaeoclimatology (pre-human climate) can be obtained by a variety of methods including: • fossils • tree rings • dating methods and • glaciers. Fossils The remains of organisms can be preserved in a number of ways, including: • the preservation of bodies or body parts in amber (gum), peat or tar where bacteria are prevented from breaking down the organic material • replacement of body tissues by minerals (eg. opal) • impressions in mud which subsequently turns to rock • the preservation of whole organisms in ice (eg. woolly mammoth). These fossils often give clues about the environment or climate. For example, finding the fossil remains of marsupials which had skeletons adapted for climbing and teeth adapted for feeding on leaves and fruits suggest that the area in which they lived at the time was probably a forest, not a shrubland or grassland. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 5 A fossilised trilobite indicates a past marine environment. (Photo: © LMP Tim Reid). If fossilised leaves of rainforest species were also found it might indicate that the region was part of a rainforest rather than a sclerophyll forest. Similarly, the finding of fossils of fish, turtles and frogs would indicate an aquatic rather than a terrestrial environment. Pollen and spores from plants can be quite distinctive and are frequently used to deduce the nature of the past vegetation in an area. Tree rings Tree rings represent seasonal growth cycles. This means that the ages of trees can often be calculated. The rates of growth each season can also be estimated from tree rings. Various environmental factors, including rainfall, aspect (sunshine) and altitude can affect tree growth. In this way the study of tree rings can indicate climate and geography of the place where a tree grows, or where its fossil remains are found. 6 Evolution of Australian biota Petrified wood from the Permian showing large annual growth rings. This indicates that there were warm conditions at the time that this tree grew. (Fossil Andrew West). (Photo: © LMP Thomas Brown) Dating methods The age of rocks which contain radioactive minerals can be determined by calculating backwards from the amount of the radioactive element remaining in the rock and the amount of the element into which it decays (changes). For example uranium-235 decays into lead-207. The rate at which radioactive decay occurs is fixed and is known as the half-life of the element. That is, the time taken for half of the original element present (parent element) to decay into the other element (daughter element). In the case of uranium-235 changing into lead-207, the half-life is 713 million years. This method is called radiometric dating. If fossils, or the rocks in which they are found, can be given a date of formation, then other fossils and rocks can be dated relative to them. If they are found higher in layers (strata) of the Earth, then they must have been formed later and so are younger, while lower ones are older. Once a fossil type has been dated, then it can be used to establish the dates of other fossils found with it. This is called relative dating. There can be problems with the method of relative dating, as it is known that the positions of rock strata can move in various ways, so that the younger fossils or rocks may be found under rather than above older Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 7 ones. However, other geological evidence can often identify this disruption to the layering. Glaciers As the ice sheets of glaciers move over the surface of the Earth they erode rocks and deposit material in a characteristic way. During ice ages glaciers advance and then retreat during warmer periods. Studying the occurrence of features of glacial erosion can enable scientists to map glaciers and determine a good deal about the climate of the time. Ice cores Cores of ice taken from glaciers and from polar ice caps can also be used to determine climate. The higher levels of carbon dioxide in air bubbles trapped in ice can indicate greenhouse global warming. Ash trapped in ice can show the presence of volcanic activity at the time the ice was formed. In an ice core the most recently formed ice is at the top and the older at the bottom. Complete Exercise 3.1 now. 8 Evolution of Australian biota The last 100 million years Environmental change In this section you will become more familiar with the sequence of changes in geography, climate and vegetation of Australia prior to its separation from Gondwana and during its drift northward towards south- east Asia. It was these environmental changes which almost certainly gave rise to the evolution of the diverse flora and fauna of this continent. The information that follows outlines the changes in climate and vegetation during different periods in Australia. You will be using this information to complete a table to summarise these changes. Cretaceous period The beginning of this period in Australia was cold. The sea level was high and much of the land mass consisted of islands in a shallow inland sea. The vegetation was dominated by non-flowering vascular seed plants (conifers, cycads, horse tails and seed ferns) but the first flowering plant fossils also appeared during this period. The climate warmed later in the Cretaceous, the land of Australia was uplifted and the angiosperms began to dominate the vegetation. By the end of the period mass extinctions, which included the Australian dinosaurs, occurred. This was possibly due to a cooling effect brought about by the collision of an asteroid with the Earth. This is thought to have caused dust in the atmosphere and a resulting reduction in the heating of the Earth’s surface by heat from the Sun. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 9 Paleocene-Eocene periods Australia had broken away from Antarctica by about the end of the Eocene period and began drifting north. Australia’s climate went from being wet and warm to being cool. Large inland lakes were part of the landscape and rainforests covered much of the continent. Ferns and conifers were still found, but flowering plants were certainly the dominant land plants, including species belonging to the genus Nothofagus or southern beech trees (see Part 2). Oligocene period This period was also cold and wet in Australia. Rainforests, including Nothofagus trees, dominated and swamps were common. The first Eucalyptus trees appeared during this period. Miocene period In the early Miocene period sea levels varied and the climate fluctuated between being hot and cold. But, it was always wet and rainforests were still dominant. However, by the late Miocene sea levels fell and the climate was cold and was becoming drier. Rainforests were beginning to give way to forests of trees with hard dry leaves (sclerophyll), especially Eucalyptus species, which could tolerate the drier conditions. Casuarina or she oak species of trees and shrubs were also common angiosperms of this later period. Pliocene period This was a time of raised sea levels with rainforests present in the wet conditions at the beginning of the period, but giving rise to sclerophyll forest, woodland and even grasslands later, especially in inland Australia. Pleistocene period Both temperatures and sea levels fluctuated during the Pleistocene, as Australia experienced alternating icehouse and greenhouse conditions. However, in general the climate became more arid and plants and animals able to cope with such conditions evolved. The giant forms, often called the megafauna evolved early in this period but became extinct by the end of it. 10 Evolution of Australian biota The table below uses a format similar to the table in the Additional resources showing the Earth’s geological time periods. Some of the information in the table has been filled in but you will need to carefully read the descriptions given for each period. Complete the worksheet. Period Time span (million years) Early Cretaceous 146-97 Late Cretaceous 97-65 PaleoceneEocene Geography Climate Vegetation islands in shallow inland seas cold, moist cycads and conifers, horsetails and seed ferns rainforests containing ferns and conifers but mainly angiosperms, especially Nothofagus (southern beech trees) rifting from Antarctica began; large inland lakes; northern drift of Australia first Eucalyptus trees Oligocene Early Miocene Late Miocene 10.5-5 Pliocene Pleistocene Recent (holocene) arid inland, north dominated by summer rainfall and south by winter rainfall.; temperatures increase from south to north Check your answers. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 11 The environmental conditions of Australia varied considerably as the continent moved north, but the most notable trend in the last 15 million years was one of increasing arid conditions. The overall change in the climate and vegetation from being cool, wet and forested to being warm and with dry mainly woodland, shrubland and grassland ecosystems. Climate warm and dry cool and wet 15 10 5 today Time (millions of years from present) Climate change in Australia over the past 15 million years. The dark shading shows the increase in warmer and drier conditions. You will draw on this information in the next part when you will examine vegetation patterns and the impact on Australian biota over time. Complete Exercise 3.2. 12 Evolution of Australian biota Adaptive radiation of marsupials The changes in environments and vegetation in parts of Australia led to the evolution of very different animals under the influence of different selection pressures. The first marsupial mammals are thought to have come from South America. The likely ancestor of Australian marsupials was probably a small species like the small South American marsupial called Dromiciops australis, which is found in the beech forests of southern Chile. This animal has many features like the small possums of Australia. Dromiciops australis a South American marsupial which is thought to belong to the group (Microbiotherids) from which Australian marsupials evolved. (Photo: © LMP T R Grant) This species is quite similar in appearance to the Australian eastern pygmy possum (Cercartetus nanus). All other American marsupials have sperm which are attached together in pairs, while Dromiciops australis and the Australian species have single sperm. There is also considerable similarity in the DNA between this little creature and Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 13 Australian marsupials. Dromiciops itself is not the actual ancestor but may belong to the same ancestral group as the original Australian marsupials. Once such a marsupial ancestor (or ancestors) reached Australia via Antarctica, the group radiated by adaptation to the different environments of the continent to produce the range of unique marsupials found in Australia today. Despite what some books say, there are still lots of species of marsupials in South and Central America today (around 75 species). American marsupials are called opossums, which are completely different from the Australian group of marsupials which are called possums. One species is found in North America, but it almost certainly moved there quite recently in geological terms. There are no kangaroos, wombats, koalas or bandicoots on the American continent, and most American marsupials are fairly small creatures, the largest of which is about the size of the Australian brushtail possum. During the adaptive radiation of marsupials in Australia a number of species became extinct as conditions changed. There were presumably no variations within their populations which allowed these marsupials to survive the changes. The major groups of modern Australian marsupials are summarised in the table below. Adaptation to different habitats has occurred during their evolution and the varied diets of some are shown in the table. Order Common names Example Diet Dasyuromorphia dasyurids carnivores Peramelemorphia bandicoots marsupial ‘mice’ Tasmanian devil native ‘cats’ bandicoots bilby Diprotodontia • koala • koala • leaf eater • wombats • common wombat • grazer • macropods (kangaroos, wallabies, potoroos, bettongs, rat-kangaroos) • grey kangaroo • grazer • swamp wallaby • browser • brush-tailed bettong • fungus, seed, tuber and insect eater • tree kangaroo • leaf and fruit eater • possums • ringtail possum, brushtail possum • leaves, flowers, fruit eaters • pygmy possums • eastern pygmy possum • nectar, pollen eater • gliders • sugar glider nectar, pollen, insect, sap eater • 14 insectivores Evolution of Australian biota Optional You could try to use either the Internet, CD ROMs or go to your local library and have a look at pictures of the members of these groups of marsupials. Find out what they look like, what they eat and where they are found. Origin of marsupials As was mentioned earlier, the currently most accepted theory of the origin of the Australian marsupials is that their ancestors came from South America, probably around 65-55 mya in the late Cretaceous or early Paleocene period. If this was a reasonable theory, then the following might be reasonable expectations (hypotheses) from the theory. ∑ There should be older marsupial fossils in south America than in Australia. ∑ Marsupial fossils should be found in Antarctica ∑ At least some South American marsupials should show affinities (similar characteristics) with Australian species. Most modern South American marsupials appear to be more closely related to the earliest marsupial fossils which were found in the Cretaceous period in North America (around 100 mya) than to modern Australian marsupials. The ancestors of the modern South American forms quickly disappeared from the north of their range, but their descendants persisted in South and Central America during the Cretaceous period. It should be noted that the one species of marsupial now found in North America, the Virginian opossum, has more recently invaded from Central America. A marsupial fossil has been found on an island off the Antarctic Peninsula, adjacent to the tip of South America. The living species Dromiciops australis has DNA similarities to Australian marsupials. Dromiciops australis has unpaired sperm, while the sperm of all other American forms swim together in pairs. These pieces of evidence suggest that the theory has at least some support. An alternative theory that the marsupial ancestors entered Australia from the north has little support, as no marsupial fossils have yet been found in Asia. It was not until around 15 mya that Australia was close enough to south-east Asia for mammals to have reached the mainland from the north. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 15 Origin and radiation of monotremes Monotremes are mammals which lay eggs but, like all other mammals, feed their young on milk. There are currently only three living species of the Monotremata group, two species of echidnas (or spiny anteaters) and one species of platypus. The short-beaked echidna occurs both in Australia and Papua New Guinea; the long-beaked echidna occurs only in Papua New Guinea; the platypus occurs only in Australia. There was once a greater abundance and distribution of monotreme species in Australia than currently occurs. Fossils of this group show that it has been here for longer than the marsupials. The oldest monotreme fossils are from the Lightning Ridge area in western New South Wales. These appeared to have been from platypus-like species which had teeth possibly adapted for eating crustaceans (eg. shrimps, crayfish). It would seem then that they were probably aquatic, so that during the Cretaceous period in which they occurred (around 110-115 mya) the environment of the Lightning Ridge area would have been much wetter than it is today. Until recently monotreme fossils had only been found in Australia, but in 1991 and 1992 several fossil monotreme teeth (which are quite distinctive) were found in Patagonia in the south of Argentina. These were about 62 million years old. Can you remember in which geological period that date falls? No doubt you would have decided the Paleocene period. Fossils of three ancient species of platypuses have been found that are from 15-23 million years old. A number of fossil echidnas have also been found on mainland Australia, indicating greater species abundance and distribution of the group. The early age of monotreme fossils, the greater abundance of fossil forms, and the occurrence of living forms in Australia has led some palaeontologists to hypothesise that the group may have evolved in Australia, before it broke away from Antarctica, and that the South American forms descended from an Australian ancestor. At present there are insufficient data to support or reject this hypothesis. 16 Evolution of Australian biota Answer the following questions, then check your answers at the end of this part. 1 The most accepted theory is that Australian marsupials evolved from ancestors which originally dispersed here from south America. Discuss the evidence which supports this theory. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 2 On the other hand it has been suggested that the fossil monotreme species found in South America may have evolved from an Australian ancestor. Briefly describe evidence for such a suggestion and comment on its acceptance by palaeontologists. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Check your answers. Complete Exercise 3.3 where you will be comparing a fossil form of a platypus to a current form. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 17 The megafauna Gigantism occurred in mammal groups in many parts of the world during the Pleistocene period and those in Australia were no exception. The term megafauna refers primarily to large marsupials, such as giant kangaroos (eg. Procoptodon goliah, Macropus giganteus titan) and huge four legged herbivores (eg. Diprotodon optatum, Zygomaturus trilobus). There were also very large echidnas (eg. Zaglossus hacketti) and a few large carnivores, like the marsupial lion (Thylacoleo carnifex). As well, there were also known to be at least four giant reptiles, including a goanna and constrictor snake, several carnivorous birds and a horned land tortoise. During this period such large forms co-existed with smaller species of the same groups and all the giant forms had died out before the end of the period (about 10 000 years ago.) Several suggestions have been made to explain the selection pressure acting on ancestral populations to favour large size. The most common suggestions are outlined below. The climate during the Pleistocene period was often very cold and so the small surface area to volume ratio of large animals which regulated their body temperature would reduce body heat loss and increase survival. In Australia, soils were often poor in nutrients and so plant growth may have been low and food of poor quality (more indigestible). Large digestive systems, especially those with fermentation chambers full of micro–organisms, could be carried by large animals, allowing them to make use of the poor quality of vegetation available. Along with this, the large animals would also lose less body heat and therefore, require less food anyway. However, there were also large reptiles (which probably did not regulate their body temperature) at the time. The climate during the Pleistocene was not always cold and similar, small species also successfully survived and reproduced during the period. These things all highlight the 18 Evolution of Australian biota difficulties of research into the environments, flora and fauna of Australia in the past. Australian megafauna. Drawings of hypothetical reconstructions of some Australian megafauna species. A species of giant kangaroo is shown along with a species of giant herbivorous diprotodont. The human is included for a size reference. There is also controversy over the reason for the demise of the megafauna. Some scientists maintain that they were hunted and killed by Aboriginal peoples, who were in Australia by between 40-60 000 years ago, or that Aboriginal use of fire eventually changed the vegetation and brought about their extinction. Another theory is that humans killed off the megafauna and this resulted in a change in the vegetation. As large herbivores were no longer eating the vegetation, very intense bushfires occurred due to the accumulation of fuel. The Aboriginal peoples were thought to have subsequently adjusted the situation by regular burning, maintaining grasslands and woodlands, where forests had occurred previously. Again, because history was not recorded at the time, the theories are based on indirect evidence, some of which is highly speculative. Many botanists believe that the vegetation changed as a result of climate change and it seems that no one really knows why the megafauna died out in Australia. As part of your syllabus requirements you are asked to gather information from secondary sources to describe some Australian fossils, where these fossils were found and use available evidence to explain how they contribute to the development of understanding about the evolution of species in Australia. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 19 If you visit the LMP Science online website there are some good starting points for your investigation. http://www.lmpc.edu.au/science Below are some famous Australian fossil locations that you could use as a basis for your research. Riversleigh Bluff Downs Murgon Lightning Ridge Naracoote Canowindra Choose two of these sites, describe two fossils found at the site and give the age of the fossils. If possible say how each fossil contributes to the development of understanding. Some examples are given in the Additional resources section. Write your answers to the above in Exercise 3.4. 20 Evolution of Australian biota Additional resources Geological time Era Period Epoch Time spans (million years) Cenozoic Quaternary Recent (Holocene) Pleistocene 10 000-today 2 mill-10 000 Tertiary Pliocene Miocene Oligocene 5-2 25-5 40-25 Australia drifts north (35-45 mya) 55-40 65-55 dominance of land dominated flowering plants by mammals and (Angiosperms) bird Cretaceous 140-65 Gondwana begins to rift (approx. 150 mya) major extinctions flowering plants expand nonflowering seed plants (eg. conifers, cycads, seed ferns) decline major extinctions last dinosaurs adaptive radiation of insects Jurassic 210-140 Pangaea rift (approx. 170 mya) angiosperms evolve nonflowering seed plants dominant age of dinosaurs, first birds Eocene Paleocene Mesozoic Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia Plant life Animal life first Homo sapiens, megafauna 21 Paleozoic Paleozoic Proterozoi c Triassic 250-210 non-flowering seed plants dominant first mammals first dinosaurs Permian 300-250 major extinctions, especially primitive plants expansion of reptiles major extinctions, especially amphibians and trilobites Carboniferous 360-300 primitive land plants then non-flowering seed plants and ferns dominant age of amphibians first reptiles first insect radiation Devonian 410-360 dominance of primitive vascular plants first seed plants age of fishes first amphibians first insects Silurian 440-410 first vascular land plants adaptive radiation of fishes Ordovician 500-440 marine algae abundant first land arthropods Cambrian 550-500 marine algae cyanobacteria first fish most invertebrate phyla known today Neoproterozoic 1,000-550 cyanobacteria early cnidaria, annelids, arthropods and echinoderms Mesoproterozoi c 1 600-1 000 cyanobacteria first animals Paleoproterozo ic Archaean 22 2 500-1 600 cyanobacteria atmosphere rich in oxygen 4 500-2 500 Evolution of Australian biota Australian fossils Riversleigh Thylacine The Thylacine or Tasmanian tiger became extinct in the 1930’s. The fossils at Riversleigh show that the animal was not restricted to Tasmania but used to live on the mainland of Australia. The fossils also show that there was more than one type of thylacine. This information came too late to save this organism from extinction but it does show that the remnant species in Tasmania should have been preserved. Thingodonta This fossil marsupial is from the Miocene period. It is unlike any living marsupial. It lived in the rainforest and may have eaten caterpillars or eggs. Canowindra Fish fossils A chance discovery during road works exposed the rich Canowindra fish fossils. The first find contained the complete fossils of 100 fish from the late Devonian. There were four types of fish present. Three of these were armoured fish and the fourth was an air-breathing lungfish. Naracoote cave Marsupial lion The marsupial lion was part of the Australian megafauna. It was the largest marsupial carnivore to live in Australia. It would have hunted other members of the megafauna such as Diprotodon during the Pleistocene. Giant short faced kangaroo This animal lived during the Pleistocene. It was up to 3 metres in height. It was double the size of the largest kangaroos living today. It had front paws that were like hooks. Its back legs had one toe. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 23 The Naracoote fossil site included the period when humans first arrived in Australia. The climate was changing becoming increasing cooler and drier. There were however, periods of warmer wetter climate corresponding to the glacial and interglacial periods. If you are interested in reading more about the changing environments and palaeontology of Australia the following books are a good place to start. Be warned that some are extremely detailed making the text difficult to read, but all have great pictures and are interesting to skim through to see pictures of fossils and reconstructions of fossil species. Long, Vickers-Rich and Rich and White also present information on plate tectonics with good coloured illustrations. 24 • Archer, M, Hand, S and Godthelp, H. 1986. Uncovering Australia’s Dreamtime. Surrey Beatty and Son, Sydney. • Archer, M, Hand, S and Godthelp, H. 1996. Riversleigh. The Story of Animals in Ancient Rainforests of Inland Australia. Reed, Sydney. • Augee, M and Fox, M. 1999. The Biology of Australia and New Zealand. Pearson Education, Sydney. • Gould, E and McKay, G. 1998. Encyclopedia of Mammals 2nd Edition. Weldon Owen, Sydney. • Long, J A. 1998. Dinosaurs of Australia and New Zealand and Other Animals of the Mesozoic Era. NSW University Press, Sydney. • MacDonald, D. 1984. The Encyclopaedia of Mammals. Volume 2. George Allen and Unwin, London. • Strahan, R. 1995. The Mammals of Australia. Reed Books, Sydney. • Vickers-Rich, P. and Rich, H T. 1993. Wildlife of Gondwana. Reed, Sydney. • White, M. 1994. The Greening of Gondwana. Reed, Sydney. • White, M. 1994. After the Greening. The Browning of Australia. Kangaroo Press, Evolution of Australian biota Suggested answers Environmental change Period Time span Geography (million years) Climate Vegetation islands in shallow inland seas cold, moist cycads and conifers, horsetails and seed ferns; first flowering plants Early Cretaceous 140-97 Late Cretaceous 97-65 Paleocene-Eocene 65-40 rifting from Antarctica began; large inland lakes; northern drift of Australia cool rainforests containing ferns and conifers but mainly angiosperms, especially Nothofagus (southern beech trees) Oligocene 40-25 swamp cold, wet first Eucalyptus trees rainforests with Nothofagus Early Miocene 25-10.5 sea levels varied hot and cold fluctuations rainforests dominant Late Miocene 10.5-5 sea levels fell cold, dry reduction of rainforests. Sclerophyll forests increasing casuarina species raised sea levels wet rainforests then sclerophyll forests woodlands and grasslands Pliocene 5-2 Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 25 Pleistocene 2 million-10000 Recent (holocene) 10 000-today temperature and sea levels fluctuated alternating icehouse and greenhouse conditions, more arid arid inland, north dominated by summer rainfall and south by winter rainfall. Woodland, grassland and shrubland temperatures increase from south to north Origin and radiation of the monotremes 26 1 South American marsupial fossils are older than those in Australia. There has been a marsupial fossil found in Antarctica and the living species Dromiciops australis has DNA and sperm similarities to Australian marsupials. These pieces of evidence all give support to the theory. 2 A greater diversity and older monotreme fossils have been found in Australia than in south America. However, the numbers of fossils found so far are quite low and so there are not really enough data yet to support this theory. Evolution of Australian biota Exercises - Part 3 Exercises 3.1 to 3.4 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 3.1: Evidence of changing environments Identify and describe three sources of evidence for the changing environment in Australia over time. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 27 Exercise 3.2: The last 100 million years Describe the general trend in the vegetation of Australia form the nonflowering seed plants in the Cretaceous through to today. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Exercise 3.3: Comparison between a fossil and living species of the same group. The two photographs following show the upper skull of a 15 million year old fossil platypus (Obdurodon dicksoni) and the modern platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) taken from the top (dorsal view) and the bottom (ventral view). In the modern platypus the teeth are lost in the adult and replaced by horny grinding pads made up of material a bit like fingernail (one of these is seen in the ventral view picture). These pads are worn away as the food is ground up but they are continuously replaced. The fossil species has teeth, although some are missing in the specimen in the photograph. Reconstructions of the whole skulls of the fossil and modern platypuses showing the whole tooth arrangement are shown on the next page. 28 Evolution of Australian biota A: Ventral view B: Dorsal view Skulls of the extinct fossil Miocene (15 million years old) platypus, Obdurodon dicksoni (top skull), and the modern platypus, Ornithorhynchus anatinus (bottom skull). (Source: Grant, T. 1995. The Platypus. A unique mammal. NSW University Press, Sydney. Plates 14 and 15) A View from below (ventral) - the sockets for the back teeth are seen in the fossil skull. One horny grinding pad is in place (upper side; dark in colour) in the modern skull. The other is missing but shows the empty socket where the juvenile teeth have been lost. B View from the top (dorsal). In both views the long bones extending forward of the brain case support(ed) the bill. Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 29 Drawings made of the fossil (left side) and modern (right side) platypus skulls to include all of the features of the skulls and to show the complete set of teeth in the fossil form (X) and grinding plates in the modern skull (Y). In each drawing the views in a clockwise order are dorsal (upper), ventral (lower) and lateral (side) views. (Source: Musser, A M. and Archer, M. 1998. New information about the skull and dentary of the Miocene platypus Obdurodon dicksoni, a discussion of ornithorhynchid relationships. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 353) a) Describe the similarities between the two skulls. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ b) Describe the differences between the two skulls. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 30 Evolution of Australian biota c) Changes from the ancestor of Obdurodon dicksoni and Ornithorhynchus anatinus have come about as a result of natural selection acting on variations during the evolution of the two species. i) Suggest possible reasons for both having the similarities you described in the skulls of the two species. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ ii) Suggest possible changes to the species’ environments which could have resulted in the evolution of the differences in the skulls which you described. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Exercise 3.4: Named Australian fossils Name of fossil site 1: _______________________________________ Description and age of fossil 1 ________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Part 3: Changing environments and biota in Australia 31 Description and age of fossil 2 _________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Name of fossil site 2:________________________________________ Description and age of fossil 3 _________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Description and age of fossil 4 _________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ 32 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 0 0 2 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 The Australian environment ...................................................... 3 Climatic regions....................................................................................3 Biodiversity................................................................................ 6 The need to maintain biodiversity........................................................7 A current effort to monitor biodiversity ..............................................10 Technological science ............................................................. 11 Discovery of the platypus...................................................................11 Contributions of new technology .......................................................15 Additional resources................................................................ 17 Suggested answers................................................................. 19 Exercises – Part 4 ................................................................... 21 Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 1 Introduction You will recall that environments have changed with tectonic movements and changes in global climate. In this part you will describe the main features of major Australian environments in terms of variations in temperature and availability of water. Biodiversity is talked about a lot in the media but what is it exactly? In this part you will discuss changing ideas of scientists in the last 200 years about Australian species as a result of new information and technology. In this part you will be given opportunities to learn to: • identify areas within Australia that experience significant variations in temperature and water availability • explain the need to maintain biodiversity In this part you will be given opportunities to: • process information to discuss a current effort to monitor biodiversity • identify data sources, gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to illustrate the changing ideas of scientists in the last 200 years about individual species such as the platypus as new information and technologies became available. Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html 2 Evolution of Australian biota The Australian environment As the Indian-Australian crustal plate moved north, after the break up of Gondwana, the climate of Australia alternated between being cool and dry (icehouse conditions) to being warm and moist (greenhouse conditions). However, by the end of the middle Miocene period (24 mya) the continent was undergoing increasing aridity and by the Pleistocene (1.8 mya) the climate appeared to have been much as it is today, perhaps even a little drier and certainly cooler. As discussed in Part 3, during these periods of geological and climatic changes new species evolved while others became extinct, resulting in the present day fauna and flora. Many species of plants and animals are adapted to dry environments but also to environments with extremes of temperature (central and alpine areas) and often low soil nutrient levels, high salinity and frequent exposure to fire. Climatic regions In terms of temperature, the climate of Australia becomes cooler from north to south and the extremes of temperature increase from the coast to the centre of the continent. Annual rainfall is highest in Tasmania, the east coast of the mainland and in northern tropical Australia, although this northern part of the continent experiences dry winters and very wet summers (wet season). The pattern of rainfall for the central arid areas of Australia is long periods of drought followed by flooding rain. In Alice Springs there may be zero rainfall for most months of the year with all of the rain falling in summer. The following maps show the major rainfall patterns and the temperature zones in Australia. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 3 Average summer (January) and winter (July) temperatures in Australia. Note that darker shading shows higher temperatures in summer and lower in winter. (Source: Australians and the environment, AUSLIG, Australian Bureau of Statistics ABS Catalogue No 4601.0. 1992. ‘Commonwealth of Australia copyright reproduced by permission’.) Average summer (January) and winter (July) rainfall in Australia. The position of the Great Dividing Range is also drawn on this map as a dashed line. Above the solid line, rainfall is mainly in summer; below the line, it is mainly in the winter. (Source: Australians and the environment, AUSLIG, Australian Bureau of Statistics ABS Catalogue No 4601.0. 1992. ‘Commonwealth of Australia copyright reproduced by permission’.) In the inland areas of Australia there is a great variation in daily temperatures. In the winter daytime temperatures may be 20 ºC while at night the temperature falls to below zero. Australia is the driest continent on Earth (except for Antarctica), with more than half of the continent considered to be arid. Less water runs off from the Australian landscape in streams and rivers than on any other continent 4 Evolution of Australian biota and 90% of the rain which falls is lost by evaporation. In spite of these arid areas being very hot and very dry there are a range of climates in Australia, including some which are extremely wet in summer (tropical north) and extremely cold in winter (alpine and central Australia.) Use the previous information to complete the following questions. 1 The hottest and most arid areas of Australia are: A) in the far north nearest the equator B) in central and central western Australia C) in Tasmania and southern Western Australia D) along the east coast of Australia. 2 A traveller to northern Australia around Darwin was amazed to find that there was no tropical rainforest although the heat and humidity indicates that this was definitely in a tropical area. The main reason for this is that: A) northern Australia is not close enough to the equator to have rainforest B) the soils are too poor to support rain forest C) there is not enough rain in the winter for the needs of rainforest D) all of the rainforest has been cut down by humans 3 A plant or animal found living in central Australia would need to be adapted to cope with the following climatic conditions. A) high rainfall and constant high temperatures B) low rainfall, hot summer temperatures and cold winter temperatures C) low rainfall and hot temperatures all of the time D 4 high rainfall in the summer but low in the winter and a wide range of temperatures from summer to winter Use the maps provided in the materials to describe the temperature and rainfall you would expect to find in north Queensland on the coast. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Check your answers. Complete Exercise 4.1 now. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 5 Biodiversity Much has been said and written about biodiversity. If you listen to the news or read the papers there seems to be constant reference to biodiversity. But what is it? What is biodiversity? Biodiversity can be defined as the variety of life forms: the plants, animals and micro-organisms found in an area. But it is more than just the living things. According to the National Strategy for the conservation of Australia’s Biological Diversity, biodiversity has been defined as: the variety of life forms; the different plants, animals and microorganisms, the genes they contain, and the ecosystems they form. It is usually considered at three levels; genetic diversity, species diversity and ecosystem diversity. So a definition of biodiversity should incorporate these three levels: • genetic diversity • species diversity • ecosystem diversity. Genetic diversity The natural variety within a population gives it a robustness to survive changing conditions. It is important to maintain genetic diversity as a safeguard against new pests and environmental change. Wild species of domesticated crops contain a large natural gene pool which should be maintained for the genetic diversity of the future. This natural genetic diversity should be valued for future breeding in changing environmental conditions. 6 Evolution of Australian biota For a population to be viable, the organisms in it must share a large gene pool. It is possible to have many individual members of a species living in an area but still have reduced genetic diversity. If a population were reduced to having only a few members of a species, this would greatly reduce the gene pool for the species. If large numbers of individuals were then bred from just these few organisms, you would have an overall decrease in genetic diversity. This leads to a lack of genetic vigour, or strength. Species diversity This is the most common usage of the term biodiversity. Species diversity is the number of different species in an area or ecosystem and their abundance. This means having lots of different species, and within each species, having many members present at a certain time. Ecosystem diversity Ecosystems are a combination of biotic and abiotic factors interacting together in an environment in a self-sustaining manner. Many ecosystems that are resistant to human impact show a high level of biodiversity. Ecosystem diversity is having a number of different ecosystems in an area. For example, a national park may show biodiversity by containing rainforest, heathland and grassland. The need to maintain biodiversity As human activity continues to spread to the furthest corners of Earth, natural areas are changed and modified, resulting in increasing and widespread extinctions of species. Currently, many experts believe such extinctions are occurring at the fastest rate in human history. This is perhaps the fastest rate since the extinction of dinosaurs 65 million years ago. This loss of Earth’s biological diversity is said to be rapidly accelerating as desertification, deforestation (especially in the tropics), degradation of oceans and water resources, atmospheric change and other environmental changes continue at a rapid pace. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 7 Here is a summary of some of the many reasons for valuing and maintaining biodiversity. For human welfare Biological diversity is important to human welfare for many reasons. Agricultural crops derive from wild species and the high-yielding hybrids of modern agriculture are continuously revitalised from wild genetic stock. Future crop species that could be used directly or modified by biotechnology are lost when entire ecosystems are wiped out. Plants are the basis of about one fifth of prescription drugs. A number of plants discovered in tropical rainforests or other wild areas have made significant contributions to the treatment of serious diseases. Loss of biodiversity disrupts ecosystems that support rainfall cycles, control floods and affect basic global systems such as climate. In addition, loss of species often signals the breakdown of ecosystems. For ecological reasons Our knowledge of the ecology of an area is rarely complete. We don’t know what will happen if one species is removed. A good example of the interdependence of organisms is the relationship between the cassowary and tropical rainforests in North Queensland. The cassowary is a large ground-dwelling bird. Cassowaries consume the fleshy fruit of tropical rainforest trees. The seeds of the fruit pass through the bird’s digestive system unharmed. The seed is dispersed from the parent tree by the cassowary eating the fruit and then moving away before the seeds are passed through the digestive system. It is thought that the cassowary is the only organism that can eat the fruit of these trees. The cassowary is under threat because of land clearing and the introduction of feral species. If the cassowary becomes extinct then the whole forest faces a problem of regeneration. This is an example of how one key species can affect the viability of an ecosystem. There are likely to be many similar relationships that we don’t have information about. For practical reasons If we destroy an ecosystem through human impact we will be destroying unstudied species. We should look to the precautionary principle when deciding on the destruction of ecosystems. If we don’t know what the effect 8 Evolution of Australian biota of an action is, we should err on the side of caution and not continue with an action until we are more certain of the outcome. For aesthetical and economic reasons There is a human need to enjoy the beauty of the natural world. People enjoy visiting areas of natural wilderness. Whether this is an innate characteristic of humans is unknown. It may be a biological need that drives people to visit wilderness areas. The expanding industry of ecotourism has realised this need and provides opportunities for people to visit natural areas. There is more money to be made taking tourists to a tropical rainforest than there is from removing the trees for timber. For philosophical and ethical reasons From an ethical standpoint, every species has as much right to exist as does the human species. Therefore, if we can prevent the extinction of a species, we should do so. Preserving biodiversity Over the last 200 years there have been dramatic changes to the Australian environment. Rainforests have been reduced by 75% and there is an extensive list of extinct mammals. Land has been degraded by rising salt levels, erosion and the addition of fertilisers. Many of the river systems have a greatly reduced rate of flow, increasing siltation, formation of isolated waterholes, decreased flood plain soil deposition and reduced native fish stocks. Many species have been highlighted as worthy of being preserved. There are campaigns to save the endangered bilby, Siberian tiger and the giant panda. To be able to save these species it is necessary to save their ecosystems. For within these ecosystems are the biotic and abiotic factors required for these organisms to survive and reproduce. An ecosystem does not have to be totally destroyed before there is an effect on biodiversity. Even slight destabilisation of the system may lead to extinction of some species. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 9 A current effort to monitor biodiversity In Australia there is a major effort to monitor the genetic biodiversity of koalas. Koalas are the only living members of their family and they have very low levels of genetic variation within and among populations. By collecting data on the genetic make up of koalas, scientists are ensuring genetic diversity in the animals that are translocated into new areas. Since European colonisation, koala numbers have crashed and their populations have become fragmented to the degree that their fitness is under threat because of inbreeding. This is especially a problem in the south-eastern parts of Australia. Here is a clear case for conservationists to intervene to preserve the biodiversity of these beautiful unique animals. This current effort by wildlife managers and conservationists has identified genetic management as an integral part of koala management. Various populations are being monitored by a number of management units in different environments to collect data about their genetic composition. Once knowledge of the koalas’ genetic variations among these populations is fully documented, future breeding programs can be planned more carefully. These efforts should ensure more effective and long term success of translocating koalas to breed more vigorous and adaptable stock. Recolonisation of populations in the most affected areas is important so that extinction does not occur among that population. So the future of flora and fauna management in National Parks and Wilderness regions require the extensive monitoring of genetic biodiversity. Do Exercise 4.2 now. 10 Evolution of Australian biota Technological science Many Australian species, especially the mammals, are difficult to study because they are often small, shy, live in burrows in the ground or holes in trees and only come out at night (nocturnal). Many naturalists, who normally rely on direct observations to collect information on species, have gathered extremely valuable information on the biology of Australian animals. The use of a range of modern techniques, including data logging, radio tracking, radio telemetry, molecular biology (eg. genetic finger printing) and computer modelling has often resulted in biologists being able to gain much more detailed understanding of various aspects of the biology of species. Although these techniques have often produced new understandings and insights, sometimes they have simply confirmed the conclusions already made by the careful observations of naturalists. Both approaches are normally required and it is a usually a mistake to assume that a technological approach will best answer a particular biological question or test a relevant hypothesis. Discovery of the platypus In 1798, just over 200 years ago, John Hunter the Governor of the colony in New South Wales observed a group of Aboriginal people spearing a platypus in a lagoon near the Hawkesbury River not far from Sydney. This furred species immediately caused controversy in scientific circles in Britain, firstly as to whether it was actually a mammal and secondly as to whether it laid eggs or gave birth to live young. The first question was answered in 1826, when a German scientist found mammary glands in a dead specimen which had been sent to him, but it was not until 1884 that a young visiting biologist from Scotland finally discovered that the species definitely did lay eggs. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 11 Of course it should be noted that the indigenous people had known this for a considerable time before it became known to western science! Investigation of the biology of the platypus For about 80 years after the discovery of its egg-laying the biology of the species was investigated by naturalists in the field, although a great deal of anatomical investigation was done by scientists using dissection and microscopic techniques. However, from the 1960s onwards various technologies were employed in the investigation of other aspects of the biology of the platypus. These include the following technologies, which will now be outlined. Radio tracking Sawpit Creek Thredbo River 5 15 Golden Hatchery Pools 1 Gauge pool Intake Pool 1 Burrows 2 3 4-5 6-9 10 11-13 14 15 Platypus A B C D E F G H 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 Distance along the river from Burrow 1 (km) Distance moved by platypuses during a radio tracking study in Thredbo River. (Reproduced from Tom Grant, The Platypus with permission of UNSW Press) 12 Evolution of Australian biota Although direct observations had been made of the activity patterns during daylight hours, a number of recent studies using radio transmitters have been able to determine nocturnal activities of platypuses, as well their home ranges and longer distance movements. The previous diagram shows the home ranges of platypuses in a number of areas and the use of burrows in a section of the Thredbo River in the Snowy Mountains. Radio telemetry It had been suggested that platypuses were unable to maintain a stable body temperature (homeothermy) but studies using radio-transmitters, which sense the temperature of the body, have been used to test this hypothesis. The graph below shows the body temperature of a platypus recorded near Jindabyne during winter conditions. Body temperature (∞C) 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 midnight 6 April midnight 7 April TIME There was only slight variation around a body temperature of 32∞C in this platypus monitored by radio transmitter (radiotelemetry), over three days during winter, in the Thredbo River. In spite of the temperature of the water being close to freezing this animal had no trouble regulating its body temperature. The shaded bars indicate the time when the platypus was in the water. Body temperature of a radio-telemetered platypus in the Thredbo River. (Reproduced from Tom Grant, The Platypus with permission of UNSW Press) The figure following shows the activity of all five platypuses monitored over the cold period of autumn, winter and spring, in a radiotelemetry study, Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 13 in the Thredbo River. As occurs during most of the year, majority of activity is at night, but there is some activity in daylight hours. Percentage of observations Indicating activity 60 40 20 0 0200 0600 1000 1400 1800 2200 Time of day Activity patterns of radio-tracked platypuses in the Thredbo River. Molecular biology techniques The male platypus has a hollow spur, on its back legs attached to a gland which produces venom (poison). This gland increases during the mating season and it was thought that the spurs were used by males either to fight for access to breeding females or in maintaining their territories. Study of genetic relationships in a platypus population in the upper Shoalhaven River in New South Wales, using analysis of DNA microsatellite sequences (genetic fingerprinting), is investigating these ideas. Molecular biology techniques have also been used to investigate details of the genetic make-up of the platypus. For example, it has been found that the species has 52 chromosomes and that sex is determined by the presence of X and Y chromosomes, as it is in humans. However, in the platypus there are 4 Y chromosomes and 4 Xs in males and 8 X chromosomes in females, while a human female has 2 Xs and a male an X and a Y chromosome. 14 Evolution of Australian biota These are a few examples of how modern technology has been used to study aspects of platypus biology which would be difficult or impossible to determine in any other way. However, as mentioned earlier, a good deal of what we know about much of the biology of the species has been obtained by research not necessarily involving such modern techniques. Contributions of new technology The graph makes a rough comparison between the old and the new by estimating what percentage of current knowledge of various aspects of the biology of the platypus that have depended on the use of modern technology, such as radio tracking, radio telemetry, data logging and molecular biology techniques. These percentages have been estimated from researching a number of scientific papers. They are very approximate but are presented in the graph below, where 100% represents all current knowledge about particular aspects of the biology of the platypus (and there are still many unanswered questions) and the bars represent approximately what percentage of that knowledge is due to the use of modern technology. 100 90 % of Knowledge 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 Evolution Genetics Reproduction Behaviour Activity Thermorgulation Feeding 0 Aspect of biology Estimated percentage of the knowledge of aspects of the biology of the platypus which are due to the use of modern technology. This graph shows that, while varying amounts of information about different aspects of the biology of this species had been gathered by biologists without the use of modern technology, the utilisation of new techniques has Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 15 contributed greatly to the understanding of its biology, especially its genetics, evolution and temperature regulation. Read a scientific review article in the Additional resources. Do Exercise 4.3. 16 Evolution of Australian biota Additional resources Temperature regulation and hibernation As indicated previously, part of the range of the platypus covers the tableland and even alpine regions of eastern Australia. Its dependence on benthic invertebrate species for its food means that in these areas individuals must enter water at temperatures that may be as low as 0°C during winter (Grant 1983b). In 1897, Sutherland, using an average of three measurements made by Baron Maklouho–Maclay on one individual platypus (Grigg et al. 1992), stated that 'the platypus, therefore, at 24.8°C is almost a cold blooded animal'. This gave support to the idea of phylogenetic primitiveness in the monotremes. Early in the 20th century, however, both naturalists (Burrell 1927) and biologists (Martin 1902) concluded that, although the platypus did have a low body temperature when compared with other mammals (32°C), it was capable of maintaining this temperature over a range of air temperatures. However, the ability of the species to` maintain homeothermy in water was doubted. No supporting evidence was given by Martin (1902), but he commented on the ability of the platypus to regulate its body temperature in water thus: 'Ornithorhynchus is not an amphibious animal, and only goes into water for food or to amuse itself, and if kept too long in water its temperature falls and it dies'. Burrell (1927), who spent inordinate amounts of his time observing platypuses in the wild, agreed with this conclusion. Studies of captive platypuses (Grant & Dawson 1978a,b), and radio-telemetric work on free-ranging animals (Grant 1983b; Grigg et al. 1992), have shown the erroneous nature of these earlier conclusions, as platypuses were found to maintain homeothermy while foraging for hours in water below 5°C. A constant body temperature is maintained in actively foraging animals by an increase in their metabolic activity, the excellent fur and tissue insulation and the possession of a vascular counter-current heat exchange system at the base of the hind legs and tail (Grant & Dawson 1978b). Bennett (1835, 1860) indicated that platypuses could be seen in Australian rivers at all seasons of the year, but because of his observations that the species was more abundant in summer than in winter, he speculated on the possibility that individuals may ‘not in some degree hybernate'. Burrell (1931) referred to periods of absence from the Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 17 river, such as might occur during flood flows, as 'lethargy–at times confused with true hibernation'. Eadie (1935) and Fleay (1980) recorded animals in captivity remaining in their nesting quarters for periods of up to 6.5 days and inferred that they were hibernating or in a torpid state. A number of radio-telemetered individuals, monitored during winter in the Shoalhaven and Thredbo Rivers in New South Wales, showed no evidence of hibernation or torpor (Grant 1983b; Grigg et al. 1992), but similar observations to those of Fleay and Eadie were made by Serena (1994) during winter in radio-tracked wild animals. Unfortunately, the body temperatures of these latter animals were not measured and the possibility of torpor or hibernation during periods of inactivity recorded by Eadie, Fleay and Serena still needs to be resolved. Platypuses have been known for some time to be intolerant of temperatures higher than 25°C (Martin 1902; Robinson 1954), but individuals in the field normally avoid such temperatures, even in the tropical parts of their distribution, by occupying burrows where the insulation of the soil buffers the changes in ambient temperature inside the burrow. Grant & Dawson (19786) found that the temperature inside an artificially constructed platypus burrow remained between 14 and 18 °C while the outside air temperature in their study area went from –5.5 to 33.5°C during the same period. Although the cooling capacity of water means that high thermal stress does not generally occur while individuals are foraging in water, the loss of metabolic heat produced during exercise in water at temperatures higher than the normal body temperature of the species means that animals cannot tolerate such water temperatures (Grant & Dawson 1978a,b). Thermal stress during foraging in water may be a factor involved in the limited distribution of the platypus in the tropical north of Australia, especially on the Cape York Peninsula, where suitable habitat seems to be available (T. R. Grant, F. N. Carrick and N I. Griffiths, unpublished observations, cited in Griffiths (1978), and in the rivers of the western plains areas of eastern Australia. Source: Grant T R and Temple-Smith P D. 1998. Field biology of the platypus (Ornithorhychus anatinus): historical and current perspectives. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B. 353, 1081-1091.) 18 Evolution of Australian biota Suggested answers 1 B The centre and central western Australia have the hottest and driest conditions. 2 C The monsoon conditions, with high summer but low winter rainfall is the main reason that there are no rainforests around the Darwin area of northern Australia. 3 B The centre of Australia has the highest temperatures and lowest rainfall, but it also has cold temperatures in winter, especially at night. 4 The climate around Cairns is one of low to moderate rainfall with mild temperatures in winter and high temperatures with rainfall in summer. Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 19 20 Evolution of Australian biota Exercise - Part 4 Exercises 4.1 to 4.3 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 4.1: The Australian environment Identify two areas within Australia that experience significant variation in temperature and /or water availability. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Exercise 4.2: Biodiversity a) What is biodiversity? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ b) Why is it important to maintain biodiversity? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 21 c) Discuss (including benefits and problems) an example of a current effort to monitor biodiversity. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 4.3: Biology of the platypus Use the work from the course and the extract from Grant and Temple-Smith (1998) in the Additional resources to answer the following questions. a) Most mammals regulate their body temperature independently of the temperature of their environment. i) Does the platypus regulate its body temperature like other mammals? Provide reasons for your answer. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ii) What did the early biologists think about the ability of the platypus to regulate its body temperature? __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ iii) List the modern technological methods used to determine the nature of temperature regulation in the platypus. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 22 Evolution of Australian biota b) Briefly outline two ways in which the platypus survives foraging in water of below 5°C to obtain its food. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ c) While observations suggest that the platypus may hibernate in cold winter conditions, such a hypothesis does not seem to be supported by research involving modern technological methods. Indicate whether you agree or disagree with the hypothesis. Justify your answer. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ d) In a manual on keeping the platypus in captivity, it is stressed that the species must be kept in an air-conditioned facility. i) Explain this recommendation. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Part 4: Adaptations to the Australian environment 23 ii) Platypuses were found to be absent from a river which seemed to have enough food for them and banks for them to dig their burrows, but which had an average summer water temperature of 33°C. Explain briefly why you think platypuses may not have been found in this river __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ e) Early naturalists thought that platypuses were only active at dawn and dusk and yet modern studies tell us a different story. Describe the daily activity pattern of the platypus and briefly explain why the naturalists could have come up with a different conclusion. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 24 Evolution of Australian biota Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 0 0 2 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Cell division ............................................................................... 4 Mitosis...................................................................................................4 Meiosis................................................................................................10 Comparing the processes..................................................................17 So why sexual reproduction? .................................................. 18 External versus internal fertilisation...................................................18 Case studies of reproductive adaptations ............................... 25 The water holding frog .......................................................................25 Red kangaroo (Macropus rufus)........................................................26 Mistletoe plants and mistletoe bird ....................................................26 Eungella gastric-brooding frog...........................................................27 Pollination in native plants .................................................................29 Suggested answers................................................................. 33 Exercises – Part 5 ................................................................... 35 Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 1 Introduction As has been discussed throughout this module so far, natural selection by the environment has led to the evolution of new species during the long periods of time which have elapsed since the appearance of the first life on Earth. Only those organisms which are adapted to their surrounding environments are successful. However, success does not just rely on survival, it also depends on reproduction. This process of reproduction passes on the genes controlling the adaptations for survival from one generation to the next. (Details of the way in which characteristics are determined and how these are inherited will be discussed in the HSC modules.) In order to continue to live in its environment an organism must survive and reproduce. In this part a number of aspects of reproduction will be considered, including discussion of some of the unique adaptations for reproduction found in species of Australian biota. In Part 5 you will have opportunities to learn to: • distinguish between the processes of meiosis and mitosis in terms of daughter cells produced • compare and contrast external and internal fertilisation • discuss the relative success of these forms of fertilisation in relation to colonisation of terrestrial and aquatic environments • describe some mechanisms found in Australian flora for: – pollination – seed dispersal – asexual reproduction with reference to local examples • 2 describe some mechanisms found in Australian fauna to ensure: – fertilisation – survival of the embryo and of the young after birth Evolution of Australia biota • explain how the evolution of these reproductive adaptations has increased the chances of continuity of the species in the Australian environment • describe the conditions under which asexual reproduction is advantageous, with reference to specific Australian examples. In this part you will be given opportunities to: • analyse information from secondary sources to tabulate the differences that distinguish the processes of mitosis and meiosis • identify data sources, gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to discuss the relative success of internal and external fertilisation in relation to colonisation of terrestrial and aquatic environments • plan, choose equipment or resources and perform a first-hand investigation to gather and present information about flowers of native species of angiosperms to identify features that may be adaptations to wind and insect/bird/mammal pollination Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 3 Cell division Consider that you started life as a single cell, a fertilised egg or zygote, just barely visible by the unaided eye. From those humble beginnings you ended up consisting of 1014 (100 billion) cells. You initially weighed 1.5 millionths of a gram and now weigh tens of kilograms. Two processes involved in your growth from a zygote have been: ∑ cell division – the production of new cells by mitosis ∑ cell differentiation (or specialisation) – changes in cells associated with their specialised functions. For example, heart muscle cells are different from the cells making up the muscles which produce movement of the skeleton, lung cells are different from kidney or liver cells. These two processes are also involved in repair of damaged tissues, such as a cut finger or a broken bone. In some organisms, especially plants and some simple animals, these two processes can result in the production of new individuals by asexual reproduction. This occurs when a new individual is produced without the fertilisation of gametes or sex cells, as occurred in the production of the zygote from which you developed (from sexual reproduction.) The type of cell division leading to the production of gametes is called meiosis. Mitosis In Patterns in nature you looked at the progress of chromosomes through the process of mitotic division. You will probably remember that this process involves the duplication of chromosomes in the nucleus of a cell, followed by division of the nucleus (mitosis) and finally division of the cell itself (cytokinesis). 4 Evolution of Australia biota Because the chromosomes are duplicated, there are two copies of each chromosome in the cell before it divides, but after it divides there are two cells, each with the same chromosome make-up as the original cell. The daughter cells, as they are called, are genetically identical to each other. 46 (23 pairs) diploid duplication 92 nuclear division and cytokinesis 46 (23 pairs) diploid 46 (23 pairs) diploid cell growth cell growth 46 (23 pairs) diploid 46 (23 pairs) diploid The process of mitosis produces two identical daughter cells. The flow chart shows the process of cell division where humans are used as an example. Remember that different species have different numbers of chromosomes. For example, humans have 23 pairs or a total of 46 chromosomes, while the platypus has 26 pairs, a total of 52 chromosomes. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 5 Asexual reproduction Complete new organisms can be produced by new cells being formed by mitosis, followed by cell differentiation. Many plants can reproduce asexually. Some of these methods are outlined following. Cuttings or pieces You might have grown plants in your garden or in a pot by taking a cutting from another plant and just pushing into the soil. It grew new roots and leaves. Various species of willows introduced into Australia have been grown in this way. Even bits of willow which get broken off by wind can result in new willow trees. plastic bag sticks fresh cutting elastic band tissue forms on base new roots form Cuttings are usually shoots cut from a desired plant. When planted in moist soil, they grow roots and form a new plant. Geraniums and carnations are often spread by cuttings. Caulerpa taxifolia is a noxious algae growing in NSW estuaries. It is successful at moving into new areas because a complete plant can grow from a piece of plant material that is less than 1 mm in size. 6 Evolution of Australia biota Runners Some lawn plants send out a runner for which roots grow to produce a new grass plant. They stay joined together, but if you cut the runner with a mower they become two separate grass plants. Dusky coral peas produce new individuals in the same way. RUNNERS are long, thin stems which grow along the ground from the parent plant. Roots and buds appear at the end of the runners and new plants develop from these. Eventually, the runner rots, leaving each new plant on its own. Since each parent plant produces a number of runners, a very dense patch of plants can form, crowding out the competition Tubers A number of Australian trees and shrubs (eg. snowgums , Angophoras and some Banksia species) are burnt by fire and appear dead, but will resprout from a thickened part of the stem just below the surface of the soil where they are protected from the heat of the fire. This thickened part of the stem is called a lignotuber. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 7 After a fire this Angophora is sprouting from the lignotuber at ground level. (Photo: Jane West) A new potato plant grows from underground stems and roots which form from the buds (‘eyes’) of a potato. The original potato tuber provides food as stored starch. This provides the energy necessary for the growth of the new potato plant. Once the new plant starts to carry out photosynthesis it begins to form tubers under the ground and to store starch in these. Eventually the plant dies and you (or the farmer) digs up the new potato tubers. If you missed digging one up it will sprout into a new potato plant the following year. Plants which die at the end of each growing season but regrow new individuals either through asexual reproduction or by seed are called annual plants. 8 Evolution of Australia biota new shoot swollen stem bud (tuber) tuber Spores Ferns reproduce from spores which are shed from the brown sporeforming bodies which you might have seen under fern fronds. A spore consists of a single cell or a group of a few cells which can grow into a new individual. Mosses and fungi also reproduce asexually by means of spores. Fern spores. (Photo; Jane West) Spore capsules on a moss. (Photo: Jane West) Bulbs Daffodils and tulips develop bulbs before the plant dies at the end of the summer and then grow again from these dormant bulbs the next spring. In all of these instances of asexual reproduction the new plants are genetically identical to the original plant from which they came – their Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 9 chromosomes are exactly the same. The reason is that the cells of the new plant divided by mitosis from those of the original plant. bud stem (long section) Cross-section of an onion bulb. Colonisation Asexual reproduction results in the production of large numbers of offspring which are normally well adapted to the current environment and so permit species to occupy an area and often to colonise other areas. Desert grasses, such as the porcupine grass (Triodia scariosa), and grasses growing on sand dunes (Spinifex sericeus) reproduce quickly by runners to occupy suitable areas. Many species which can regenerate after fire from remnant lignotubers, also are carrying out asexual reproduction. New individuals are being produced from the remains of the burnt plants. Native ferns also reproduce from spores, as do the fungi (including mushrooms and puff balls) found on the floors of Australian forests. If this form of reproduction is so successful, you might ask why do most species also carry out sexual reproduction? A very good question indeed. Meiosis Sexual reproduction occurs when the genetic material from the nucleus of a female sex cell joins with the nucleus of a male sex cell. This process is called fertilisation, as you will probably remember and the sex cells are gametes. The process of fertilisation is preceded by meiosis, or meiotic cell division, which results in each gamete having half the number of chromosomes of the original parent cells. During meiosis the chromosomes duplicate, just as they do in mitosis, but the cell divides 10 Evolution of Australia biota twice, resulting in a halving of the chromosome number. The sperm or egg in a platypus, for instance, has 26 chromosomes, while the adult has 52 chromosomes in each of its body cells. The flow chart below shows some of the changes in chromosome number during the process of meiosis. The diagram below shows meiosis in humans. 46 (23 pairs) diploid duplication 92 nuclear division and cytokinesis I 46 46 nuclear division and cytokinesis II nuclear division and cytokinesis II 23 haploid 23 haploid 23 haploid 23 haploid Meiosis produces gametes with half the number of chromosomes of other body cells. Chromosomes occur in pairs. For example, you inherited one of each of your 23 pairs of chromosomes from your mother’s egg and the other 23 from your father’s sperm. You received 46 individual chromosomes but these consisted of 23 pairs. If you are male then the 23rd pair consisted of one X chromosome from the egg and one Y from the sperm. If you are female then you inherited an X from both the sperm and the egg. During the process of meiosis the chromosomes are assorted in different combinations and some bits of chromosomes even get exchanged between members of a pair. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 11 This process is called crossing-over. This process and the mechanism of assortment will be dealt with in later HSC work. However, it should be noted here that these two processes result in meiosis not only halving the number of chromosomes, but also producing genetic variation within the gametes. If you were to look at a group of green and golden bell frogs, a flock of seagulls or several platypuses, you could probably not pick the differences between each individual in the group (although they probably could pick the differences between each other). If you look around a crowd people you will notice that all human beings are different from each other. Although you have the same parents, unless you are an identical twin, even your brothers and sisters look different from you and from your parents. Meiosis leads to genetic variability. Sexual reproduction It is really important to bring about the halving of the number of chromosomes in the gametes, otherwise every time two gametes fertilised each other, the number of chromosomes would double. Have a look at the next diagram, where the top half shows what would happen in an imaginary life cycle of the green and golden bell frog with gametes being produced by mitosis. (This does not normally happen, of course, in nature!) The lower diagram is the real life cycle as occurs when gametes are produced by meiosis. Unless meiosis takes place, the number of chromosomes in the young adult will keep doubling. Normally adult cells have the double, or paired number of chromosomes (diploid) number and the gametes the single or unpaired (haploid) number of chromosomes. 12 Evolution of Australia biota adult female green and golden bell frog 26 chromosomes egg 26 mitosis fertilisation adult male green and golden bell Frog 26 chromosomes mitosis zygote 52 sperm 26 OOPS! too many chromosomes young adult 52 larval stagetadpole 52 embryo 52 What would happen if frog gametes were produced by mitosis. adult female green and Golden Bell frog 26 chromosomes egg 13 meiosis fertilisation adult male green and golden bell frog 26 chromosomes young adult male or female 26 meiosis zygote 26 sperm 13 larval stagetadpole 26 embryo 26 The lifecycle of the green and golden bell frog. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 13 In the life cycle of the green and golden bell frog (Litoria aurea), there is a larval stage, the tadpole. In most cases where larval stages occur they are involved in either or both of the following processes outlined below. • Feeding and growth – Quite a number of insects which live near water have aquatic larval stages (eg. mosquitoes, mayflies and dragonflies). Caterpillars are the larval stages of moths and butterflies. These stages feed ravenously to produce the energy and materials necessary to allow the animals to develop into the adult stage. • Dispersal – Most invertebrate animal species found in water, including rock oysters and the corals which make up the Great Barrier Reef, produce larval stages which either swim or are carried along by the water flow or water currents. Species colonise other areas in this way. In flowering plants the male gametes are the pollen grains produced by the anthers of the flower and the female gamete is a cell found in the ovule inside the ovary of the female part of the flower. Both of these are produced by the process of meiosis and so have half the adult number of chromosomes in their nuclei. The general structure of a flower is shown below. filament style pistil stigma stamen anther ovary ovule petal sepal Cross section of a simple flower to show the various parts referred to in the discussion of reproduction in flowering plants. 14 Evolution of Australia biota In most flowering plants there are both male and female parts, although in some, such as passionfruit, kiwifruit and Casuarina (sheoaks) there are separate male and female plants. When a pollen grain settles on the stigma of a receptive plant, a tube grows down into the ovary and the nucleus from the pollen moves down this tube to fertilise the female gamete nucleus inside the ovule. The fertilised egg cell develops into an embryo found inside the ovule, which becomes the seed. The ovary becomes the fruit after flowering has taken place. Pollination and fertilisation in a typical flowering plant. Pollination In a flowering plant fertilisation actually occurs in the ovary, but the pollen has to be transferred to the female part of the plant by wind or a variety of living agents like insects, small mammals and birds. The process of the pollen reaching the sticky surface of the stigma of the female part of a plant is called pollination. Living pollinating agents are attracted to the flower by its smell, colour, shape and availability of a food source, especially nectar, but also the pollen itself. As an insect, small mammal or bird brushes past the anther it picks up pollen and deposits it when it touches a stigma. In most species the pollen is produced at a different time than when the stigma can receive it, so that plants are not usually pollinated by their own pollen (self pollination). In most instances flowers are pollinated with pollen from other plants of the same species (cross pollination). This insures greater variation in the offspring. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 15 Bees are perhaps the most recognised pollinating agent, carrying pollen from one flower to another as they seek out nectar, from which they produce honey. Pollinators of Australian plants include ants, bees and birds. However, many Australian flowers are also pollinated by birds, especially the honeyeaters (eg. wattle birds, noisy miners, spinebills), and by small mammals like the pygmy possums, some of the marsupial mice (more correctly called marsupial carnivores or insectivores, like the various species of Antechinus). A rainbow lorikeet feeding on a Grevillea sp (Photo: D. Gonzalvez). 16 Evolution of Australia biota There is even a tiny marsupial called the honey possum which pollinates flowers in Western Australia where it is found. Common species found in the bush and in gardens throughout Australia are pollinated by these vertebrate species, including many of the bottlebrush (Callistemon), Banksia and Grevillea species. Many of these pollinating species have brush-tipped tongues for penetrating the flowers to gather nectar. Pygmy possums weighing only around 24 grams, feed mainly on nectar and pollen, but will also take insects in their diet. Wind is responsible for pollinating many Australian plant species, especially the grasses. In these species the anthers are very long and produce large amounts of light pollen, which is easily picked up by the wind passing over the flowers. Usually the stigmas are also very large and spread out to receive pollen carried by the wind. Comparing the processes As you will realise from the amount of time already spent on the discussion of cell division and reproduction, the processes of mitosis and meiosis are extremely important in biology. So it is essential that you have a good understanding of them. Read through the material covered so far in Part 5 of this module and then fill in the table for Exercise 5.1. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 17 So, why sexual reproduction? What has been discussed so far does not really answer the question, which was raised earlier. Mitosis and asexual reproduction results in large numbers of offspring, which are identical and well adapted to survive and reproduce. But, meiosis results in lots of different offspring. Sexual reproduction further increases the difference between offspring depending on who the parents were and not just due to the fact that the gametes are different from each other. Organisms carry out sexual reproduction because the presence of such variation means that there may be individuals in the population which are adapted to any environmental changes which might occur. You will probably remember that this idea was discussed earlier, in Part 1 of this module. Sexual reproduction provides the variation which is acted on by the process of natural selection to produce changes in a population when the environment changes. Remember that it is these changes over time and with changing environmental factors which almost certainly explains the evolution of new species. There is no variation from asexual reproduction, but self-fertilisation also produces less variation due to the fact that the parents of both gametes are the same. For that reason, cross fertilisation normally occurs in sexual reproduction. External versus internal fertilisation It is almost certain that life evolved in the sea and then later proceeded onto land. Undoubtedly, most of the early animals and plants living in water were fertilised outside the body (external fertilisation). Gametes were released into the water in large numbers and at least some male and female gametes came together – fertilisation. 18 Evolution of Australia biota External fertilisation is still found in most invertebrate and plant species living in water today. The corals of the Great Barrier Reef for example all release their gametes into the sea, often at the same time, causing the water to become, cloudy with the vast numbers of swimming sperm and eggs released. Larval stages are usually found in species which carry out external fertilisation, including vertebrates like fish and amphibians. Once organisms moved onto land external fertilisation became more difficult as gametes normally need to be kept from drying out and to be in a fluid which brings them together. However external fertilisation has persisted but only in plants and animals which live under moist conditions, such as mosses and ferns, a few amphibians and some invertebrate species. Fertilisation in insects of reptiles, birds and mammals occurs inside their bodies (internal fertilisation). Fluid provides a medium in which the male gametes move. Internal fertilisation avoids the problems of gamete transfer and the dry conditions found on land. Three other strategies have evolved in terrestrial species which have also permitted the permanent colonisation of land, including very arid environments which have come to occupy a great deal of the Australian mainland. The advantages of seeds, eggs and internal fertilisation will now be examined. Seeds Plants produce seeds which can withstand dry conditions. When water is available, embryos within the seeds germinate to produce seedlings and then adult plants. Food material is stored within special areas within the seed. A lot of Australian plant species grow quickly from seeds after the adult plants have been destroyed by fire. In some species, including most of the Banksias, the seeds are not released from the dried out fruit until it has been burnt by fire. This means that the young seedlings are not competing with adult plants for nutrients from the soil. There are a host of different mechanisms which permit seeds to be dispersed in the environment to insure the replacement of older plants, to recolonise areas which have been burnt or been exposed to drought and to colonise new areas. The diagram below shows a number of ways seeds can be dispersed. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 19 Dispersal mechanisms Examples Water dispersal Coconuts grow in areas near oceans. The coconuts fall into the water and can float for thousands of kilometres. Animal dispersal Many seeds have hooks and burrs as part of their seeds. These become trapped in the fur or feathers and are transported by animals far from the parent plants. burrs Wind dispersal Many seeds have light feathery fruit that are easily blown by the wind. Self-dispersal Some seeds have explosive mechanisms that fling the seeds away from the parent plant. 20 Evolution of Australia biota Many seeds are dispersed by humans. Can you suggest some ways in which you may have dispersed seeds from one place to another. Many plant weed species have been spread inadvertently by humans. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Check your answer. Eggs The eggs of the insects, birds and the monotreme mammals are relatively impervious to water so that the developing embryo inside the egg is protected from drying out in terrestrial environments. Within the egg a yolk provides a source of energy for the embryo to grow until the young hatches from the egg. Internal development In all mammals, except the monotremes (platypus and echidnas) development of the embryo occurs inside the uterus (womb) of the female. In marsupials the developing embryo is born at a very poorly developed stage and completes its development in the pouch where it receives milk produced by the mammary glands. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 21 Young red kangaroo. (Photo: © Griffiths, M. 1978. The Biology of the monotremes. Academic Press.) In placental mammals, including humans, a well developed placenta forms from tissues of the embryo and the wall of the mother’s uterus. Diffusion between the blood vessels in the placenta and the uterus allows oxygen and food molecules to be taken up by the developing embryo from the mother’s blood and waste products to be passed back into the blood of the mother. The young of placental mammals vary in the stage of development they reach before they are born. For example, the young of rats and mice are bald, blind and helpless when they are born, while the young of an African antelope or zebra can run with the herd within a few hours of being born. However, all placental mammals are born in a much more advanced stage of development than any of the marsupial species. The young of the red kangaroo for example only weighs a few grams when it is born, while the adult kangaroo is around the size of a human. The photograph above shows a newborn red kangaroo attached to the teat in its mother’s pouch. At this stage it is not much bigger than the size of a jelly bean! Although the platypus and echidnas lay eggs the young are hatched at about the same stage as marsupial young. They then complete their development on milk from the mammary glands. 22 Evolution of Australia biota A young echidna. (Photo: © Griffiths, M. 1978. The Biology of the Monotremes. Academic Press.) In the echidna this development takes place inside a temporary pouch on the abdomen of the mother and then in a burrow. In the platypus the whole development takes place in a burrow constructed by the mother in the bank of the river. A young echidna hatching from the egg appears in the previous photograph. The size can be judged from the fingers of the hand in which the young is held. While internal development is the rule for non-monotreme mammals, it also occurs in some fishes (eg. some sharks), a few amphibians (eg. gastric-brooding frog) and some reptiles (eg. a number of skink lizard species and some snakes) in Australia. In these situations the eggs do not form a waterproof shell and young hatch inside the adult but are nourished mainly by the food stored in the yolk of the eggs, although in some cases a rudimentary placenta is formed which permits exchange of materials between the developing young and the mother. All of these strategies have evolved to ensure survival of the embryo until it is born (or hatched). In marsupials survival after birth is brought about by the attachment of the young to the teats from the mammary glands. In most Australian marsupials the developing young are housed within a pouch. But in some, marsupials particularly the small Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 23 carnivorous species, the pouch is very poorly developed and the young are literally carried around hanging from the mother’s teats! Large numbers of gametes are normally produced as many do not survive in species which carry out external fertilisation. Large numbers insure that at least some will fertilise each other and so lead to the production of offspring. Even when offspring are produced, many of them do not survive. However, some species have few young but look after them well so that most survive. In general, animals which have external fertilisation have large numbers of potential offspring but have a high death rate of the young, while those with internal fertilisation, especially those with internal development, have fewer young with a lower mortality. Do Exercise 5.2 now. 24 Evolution of Australia biota Case studies of reproductive adaptations Many of our local plants and animals have adaptations that increase the chance of survival of the young. There are some examples below. The water holding frog The water holding frog (Cyclorana platycephala) is one of several Australian species of burrowing frogs which live in arid conditions, a rather unusual place for frogs to live you would expect! Frogs have external fertilisation and so must have water in which to mate and produce tadpoles. Rainfall over many of Australia’s arid areas is less than 20 cm per year on average, but the rainfall is normally irregular and may come in large downpours, which create many pools in which frogs can live and breed. There are a number of species of invertebrates which hatch from dormant eggs when rain occurs and these provide food for frogs. The frogs themselves have survived the extended dry periods by living in a cocoon about 0.5 m underground. When the temporary pools in which they lived began to dry up the frogs buried down into the soil, away from the heat of the sun, and formed cocoons around themselves made from dead skin and mucus secreted by the skin. This cocoon is quite impermeable to water and so their water losses to the surroundings has been low. These frogs can tolerate some dehydration (loss of body fluids) and an increase in toxic waste products arising from their metabolism, which has been lowered during their time underground. As soon as the water from the new rains soaked down to them, the frogs break out of their cocoons and make their way back to the surface to feed and mate in the pools. As the time that these temporary pools last in a dry environment is often quite short, the frogs have a reproductive adaptation for survival. The time taken for tadpoles of related species to develop into frogs is Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 25 several months, but in this desert species, the tadpole becomes a fully developed frog within only 30 days. Hopefully this occurs before the pool has dried out and in time for these frogs to burrow underground and wait until the next rains, which may even be a year or more away. Red kangaroo (Macropus rufus) The red kangaroo has the ability to survive in a hot, dry environment. The species is also adapted for reproduction in a habitat where food supply can be very poor due to drought conditions. During good conditions female red kangaroos have one young-at-foot (which is not yet independent and still feeding from milk from a teat in the pouch), one young suckling in the pouch and a dormant embryo in the uterus. Once the young leaves the pouch and the young-at-foot becomes independent, the dormant embryo starts to develop, is born and enters the pouch. Immediately after this birth, the female mates again and another dormant embryo develops. This is called embryonic diapause. As a result of this reproductive strategy, the red kangaroo can continue to reproduce under drought conditions. Once food becomes short the young-at-foot is no longer fed. If it is old enough it will survive on its own but if not it will die. The young in the pouch survives for some time and will become a new recruit to the population if conditions get better, but will die if the mother becomes too poorly nourished to produce enough milk. However, once this happens the dormant embryo develops, is born and moves into the pouch. Again, if conditions improve this young will survive but will die if the drought is long and very severe. At this point females no longer breed but immediately begin to breed again within a week or so after food again becomes available. A tough life for the young that die, but the evolution of this reproductive strategy ensures the survival of the species. Mistletoe plants and mistletoe bird Mistletoe plants belong to a family of flowering plants whose seeds germinate on other plant species, the host. The developing seedlings grow special root-like structures into the branches, or occasionally roots, of other plant species. This structure penetrates the xylem of the other plant and the mistletoe obtains its supply of water and minerals from the other plant. Mistletoes are therefore parasites. 26 Evolution of Australia biota There are 84 species of mistletoe in Australia and most have their seeds dispersed by one species of bird, the mistletoe bird. The mistletoe fruits are sweet, sticky and attractive to mistletoe birds. The digestive system of the mistletoe bird is very short and the seeds pass through in less than 25 minutes. The mistletoe bird defaecates and wipes its sticky faeces (droppings) onto branches on which it is perched. The Mistletoe seed survives passing through the mistletoe bird, germinates and starts to grow on the branch. Because the range of mistletoe species produce fruits at different times of the year, the mistletoe bird has a constant supply of food and is available as a disperser of seeds because of its nomadic nature and its strange toilet habits! The Eungella gastric-brooding frog The Eungella gastric–brooding frog (Rheobatrachus vitellinus) occurs in a small area of northern Queensland. It mates in the water and after external fertilisation the female eats the small number of eggs produced, (around 25) which then develop in her stomach, first into tadpoles and then into small frogs. The normal digestive mechanisms and the urge to eat in the mother are suppressed during this peculiar pregnancy. The mother actually lives in a burrow during the pregnancy but occasionally goes to the water, where she lets the tadpoles, and later the little frogs, out into the water to feed. If a predator is about she quickly eats them again and returns to the burrow. The young remain in the stomach for at least six weeks. Remember that most adaptations are a result of natural selection acting to eliminate a characteristic which is not beneficial to survival and reproduction or favouring one which is beneficial. What do you think the benefit of this reproductive strategy might be for the gastric brooding frog? _________________________________________________________ Check your answer. Banksia serrata As well as specialised pollination mechanisms Banksias have other reproductive adaptations to increase survival. Plants such as Banksia serrata only open their seedpods when they have been burnt. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 27 Banksia before a fire. (Photo: J West) Banksia after a fire. (Photo: J West) This means that the seeds do not have to compete with the parent plants and can grow in a soil that has been enriched from the ash of the fires. They also have regrowth from lignotubers and epicormic shoots. Regrowth after a fire from epicormic shoots in Angophora sp. (Photo: J West). The tough thick bark of this Banksia protects it during the fires however Banksia ericifolia does not have this thick bark and is killed by fire. 28 Evolution of Australia biota Pollination mechanisms in native plants As mentioned, many Australian plants are pollinated by animals, while others are pollinated by wind. Banksia Banksias are a member of the Proteaceae family which is a Gondwanan group of plants. Their distinctive flowers (spikes) consist of thousands of individual flowers grouped together in an inflorescence. The grouping of flowers gives a rich reward to any pollinator that visits and provides a large flower that is easy to find. The flowers are often seen dripping with nectar and this acts an attractant to insects and birds. The flower first appears as a solid cylinder and starts to open usually from the top. In Banksia ericifolia there are four anthers and a hooked style. At first the style is hooked underneath the stamens. The male parts of the flowers mature at first and are then released. This prevents self-fertilisation from occurring. Banksia ericifolia - notice the bee visiting the flowers (Photo: Jane West). Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 29 Grevillea Grevilleas are another member of the Proteaceae family. The flower consists of an inflorescence with many individual flowers grouped together as an attractant to pollinators. Grevillea inflorescence (Photo: Jane West). The structure of the individual Grevillea flower (Photo: Jane West). Around the place where you live there will be a range of flowering plant species which is an outdoor laboratory for you to study, even if it is just the pot plants on the balcony or veranda. If you are unable to find some flowers the pictures from this part of the module can be viewed in colour on the Science online website: www.lmpc.edu.au/science 30 Evolution of Australia biota There are some safety issues here to consider. You will have to cut open a flower. Be careful whenever you use cutting implements. Here is what you have to do. Procedure: Select two species of flowering plant with very different flower shapes. You may pick a bell-shaped flower like a lily or hibiscus and possibly a complex flower head (inflorescence) such as a bottlebrush or Banksia species. 1 Select two flower species. Try to pick native species if they are flowering. 2 Use books, ask your local flower shop or nursery or use other sources to find out the name of the plant species you have chosen. 3 Take one flower from the plant and dissect it with a hard-backed razor blade or sharp knife - it may also be useful to use forceps (tweezers) to hold the parts as you separate them. Try to identify the following structures which were shown in the diagram in the notes. • anther (usually yellow in colour due to the pollen) • filament (this supports the anther). These make up the stamen there are usually many stamens in each flower. • stigma (often sticky to receive the pollen) these also protrude from the flower but there is usually only one per flower • style (this connects the stigma to the ovary) • ovary • petals (if they are present - bottle brushes and gums don’t have any). Remember that some flowers, like the bottlebrushes, Banksias and Grevilleas consist of many flowers. 5 Draw a picture of an individual flower and/or take a photograph of it. Label the parts of the flowers that you can identify. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 31 Lambertia formosa - bird pollinated plant. (Photo: Jane West) 6 Observe the flowers to find out how they are pollinated - watch for birds or insects visiting them or for pollen being blown in the wind 7 Discuss ways in which the flowers may be adapted to attract pollinating animals or how they are modified to take advantage of the wind as a pollinating agent. Try to find out by observation or by consulting sources how the animal pollinators may be adapted to obtain what they need from the flower and how they produce pollination. 8 For example: you might observe a red wattle bird probing its curved beak between the flowers in the flower head of a bottle brush and its long brush-tipped tongue extracting nectar, or a honey bee (an introduced species) disappearing into the bell of a lily flower and coming out covered in pollen. Record your observations, discussion and drawings in a short report in Exercise 5.3. 32 Evolution of Australia biota Suggested answers Seeds Did you think about any of the following? • Seeds on a travelling rug which you sat on while having a picnic in one place and then used in another area. • Seeds in your socks, which you were wearing when walking through a paddock in the country and picked out when you got home, or even when you went to another country area. • Seeds stuck to your dog’s ears after a run through a park which you picked off on the way home. The Eungella gastric – brooding frog The description indicates that the species produces a ‘small number of eggs’. You will remember that species which have external fertilisation normally produce very large numbers of eggs indeed, as many drift away, die or get eaten by predators. The gastric brooding frog has a very high rate of success in rearing its young as they are well looked after by the mother. Unfortunately, this strategy has not continued to be as successful since human activities have changed many Australian ecosystems. A related species of the gastric brooding frog is now extinct. The Eungella species has not been seen for some time and may also be close to extinction. Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 33 34 Evolution of Australia biota Exercises - Part 5 Exercises 5.1 to 5.3 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 5.1: Mitosis and meiosis Fill in the table to show the differences between the processes of mitosis and meiosis. Questions Mitosis 1 Does duplication of chromosomes occur in the process? yes 2 How many cell divisions occur during the process? 3 Compared to the number of chromosomes found in cells before the process, how many are found in the daughter cells? (eg. if an organism had 42 chromosomes in its adult cells, how many would be in the daughter cells after the process?) 4 How similar is the genetic make-up of the daughter cells to each other and to the original parent cell? identical 5 What activities carried out by living organisms involve the process? growth Meiosis two Exercise 5.2: Sexual reproduction a) Describe and give an example of external fertilisation. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 5: Reproductive adaptations 35 b) Describe and give an example of internal fertilisation. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ c) Compare and contrast external and internal fertilization ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ d) External fertilisation is more common in aquatic organisms than in terrestrial organisms. Discuss reasons for this. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 5.3: Flowering plants Record your observations of the flowers of two plants, include discussion and drawings (or photographs) in a short report of about two pages. Use your own paper and attach to this sheet. 36 Evolution of Australia biota Gill Sans Bold Biology Preliminary Course Stage 6 Evolution of Australian biota Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 0 0 2 I er b to T S c O EN g in D M t a r EN o p or AM c n 2 Contents Introduction ............................................................................... 2 Mass extinctions........................................................................ 4 Specialisation and extinction ...............................................................5 Extinction due to human activity ..........................................................6 Evolutionary survival and extinction .......................................... 9 Summary................................................................................. 11 Suggested answers................................................................. 17 Exercises – Part 6 ................................................................... 21 Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 1 Introduction As was discussed earlier in this module, extinction is often part of the evolutionary process. If conditions in an environment change and no individuals in a population of a species have a genetic make-up which permits them to survive and reproduce under the new environmental conditions, that population of the species will become extinct. When global environmental changes occurred over time many species on Earth became extinct. Of all the millions of species, which have evolved over the 4.7 billion years since life began on Earth, more than 99% of them are now extinct. On average, most species of organisms survive for between one and ten million years, although a few species have survived much longer than that. Modern humans have been on the Earth for only about 100 000 years so far, but in that time have had considerable effect on the ecosystems of the planet, including being directly responsible for processes which have resulted in the early extinction of other species. The study of the evolution of species through time and an understanding of the possible changes to past environments may permit some prediction of the nature of future ecosystems. Although the processes are complex and the gaps in knowledge must make any predictions quite tentative, this module discusses such predictions and the evidence which permits them to be suggested. In this part you will be given opportunities to learn to: 2 • explain the importance of the study of past environments in predicting the impact of human activity in present environments • identify the ways in which palaeontology assists understanding of the factors that may determine distribution of flora and fauna in present and future environments. Evolution of Australian biota In this part you will be given opportunities to: • gather, process and analyse information from secondary sources and use available evidence to propose reasons for the evolution, survival and extinction of species, with reference to specific Australian examples. Extract from Biology Stage 6 Syllabus © Board of Studies NSW, originally issued 1999. Revised November 2002. The most up-to-date version can be found on the Board's website at http://www.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/syllabus_hsc/syllabus2000_lista.html Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 3 Mass extinctions Throughout geological time, since the appearance of living organisms on Earth, there have been five mass extinction events. These are events where more than 75% of species in existence at the time became extinct. These are shown in the table below. Period Time Nature of event end Ordovician 441 mya 85% of all species wiped out late Devonian 365 mya two waves of extinction, especially marine species end Permian 251.4 mya 96% extinction, including mammal-like reptiles end Triassic 200 mya 75% of species, especially marine forms extinct Cretaceous 65 mya 75-80% become extinct, including the dinosaurs Except for the mass extinction 65 mya at the end of the Cretaceous Period, all of the other four extinction events appear to have been due to changes in climate, sea levels, ocean current circulation, volcanic activity and tectonic plate movements. As was discussed in Part 2 of this module, all of these things interact with each other to produce change in climate and therefore changes in ecosystems. 4 • A rising sea level, associated with global warming at various times in the geological history of the Earth, not only reduced the amount of land available for occupation by terrestrial species, it also resulted in climatic changes in different parts of the planet. • The movement of the Indo-Australian plate north, after it broke from Antarctica, brought about temperature and rainfall changes in the Australian landmass, but also changed ocean currents, which in turn probably also led to further climatic change. Evolution of Australian biota These changes normally led to complete destruction of habitats to which the existing species were adapted, leading to their extinction. The few species which did survive these events became the ancestors for a further radiation of new species. It has been estimated that the evolution of new species to fill such modified ecosystems was normally quite slow. For example, after the mass extinction at the end of the Permian period it took at least six million years for the species diversity to return to anywhere near what it had been before the extinction event. The mass extinction of species at the same time as the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period was probably not due to the factors discussed above but to the effect of large meteorite impacts, such as that at the Chicxulub crater on the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico, which is 200 km across! It is suggested that such impacts drove so much dust into the atmosphere that it reduced the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth and severely reduced photosynthesis throughout the ecosystems. It is also possible that the impact also triggered volcanic eruptions by causing movement of tectonic plates. The ash from these eruptions further reduced light penetration from the sun. All of these extinctions however, were not something that just happened overnight. Even in the Cretaceous extinction, the elimination of species was thought to be fairly slow, lasting up to at least 100 000 years. Specialisation and extinction Species which evolve into a specialised way of life are thought to be more prone to extinction than those that have more general adaptations. The megafauna may have been dependant on specific attributes of their environments and were unable to cope with changes to these environments brought about by climate change. The platypus is highly specialised to obtain its food from the bottom of water bodies using its bill. The modern species must obtain all of its food in the water and so is very susceptible to any environmental changes which might reduce the amount of aquatic habitat. The other fossil platypus species may have become extinct as a result of arid conditions increasing over their distribution. Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 5 Extinction due to human activity Since modern humans evolved, a sixth mass extinction of species has been in progress due to a number of human activities, including: • hunting for food, animal products (eg. furs) and for sport • pollution – especially water pollution, which has eliminated many susceptible species • introduction of predators, diseases and competitors • climate change – mainly due to the greenhouse effect and global warming • habitat destruction for agricultural land, plantation forests and urban development. You are almost certainly aware that carbon dioxide and other gases in the lower atmosphere permits the Sun’s heat to reach the Earth but prevents some of it from being re-radiated back into space. Without this greenhouse effect the average temperature on the Earth would be several degrees lower than it is now and some species would be unable to survive. However, the burning of fossil fuels, and a number of other human activities, are increasing the amount of these gases in the atmosphere, enhancing the greenhouse effect. As a result of this global warming is occurring. There are a few scientists who still are unconvinced by the evidence that global warming is occurring, but the idea is generally accepted by the majority of scientists. The world body of scientists called the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that the rate of warming at the present was unprecedented. They also found that the rate matched the model for the enhanced greenhouse effect. The prediction is that sea levels will rise by 7 metres over the next thousand years. While most scientists would agree with the findings of the IPCC report there is much less agreement about what climate and sea level changes will result from global warming. Increased global warming is happening as a result of human activity but what sea level and climatic change it will lead to in the future, and how far off these changes will be experienced, is much less definite. Scientific knowledge of changes in climate, habitats and the diversity of species occurring in an area have been deduced in various ways by scientists, including palaeontologists, climatologists and geologists. But, predictions from these data need to be made with extreme caution due to the incomplete nature of the data. Remember that humans have only been around for the last 100 000 years and for a good deal of that 6 Evolution of Australian biota time they did not have the technology either to measure the data or to record it. Wild species of organisms, which are not yet extinct, but occur in small numbers or in restricted habitats are often given conservation descriptions like threatened, endangered or vulnerable. These are species which have not had suitable genetic variations in their populations which have permitted some individuals to survive and reproduce in the face of the rapid changes brought about in their environments by the activities of humans. Any climatic changes, brought about by global warming, have the capacity to affect the status of such species and so predictions of what will happen to the climate in various parts of the world are important from the point of view of their conservation. Species of organisms used for food by humans will also be affected by climate change. Various complex climate models suggest that some areas of the world, which are now well supplied with rainfall, will become arid and some arid areas will be well supplied by rainfall. This is predicted to have a major impact on some of the current food producing areas of the world. At present we know that even weather forecasting from day to day is quite imprecise and so longer range predictions using these climate models are at best quite speculative. It is a sobering thought that, even if the extinction brought about by human activities were to cease now, the descendants of the modern humans responsible for this extinction would probably not witness a recovery. It has been estimated that recovery from previous mass extinctions has taken millions of years. As the average length of time any species has lasted from its evolution to its ultimate extinction is only between one and ten million years, it seems likely then that Homo sapiens will itself have become extinct before the recovery of diversity has occurred! In Parts 2 and 3 of this module you considered that climate, geology, habitat and changes in flora and fauna over geological time need to be deduced or inferred from indirect evidence. You will need to go back through your notes to find this information. This will be good revision and will also help you with the self test at the end of this part of the module. 1 Choose one period of geological time since Australia split away from Antarctica and describe the climate, sea level, geology and flora and fauna of the period. _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 7 2 Describe two pieces of evidence scientists may have used to work out what the conditions would have been like at that time. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3 Greenhouse conditions resulting in global warming have occurred previously in the geological history of the Earth. One reason for this is thought to have been slight changes in the Earth’s axis and another the greenhouse gases being released from increased volcanic activity at various times. However, the latest global warming is thought to be due to human activity. Outline one method which scientists may have used to work this out. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Check your answers. 8 Evolution of Australian biota Evolution, survival and extinction The last thylacine or Tasmanian tiger, Thylacinus cynocephalus, was captured in 1933 and died in captivity in 1936. This large carnivorous marsupial once occurred on the mainland of Australia, as well as in Tasmania and Papua New Guinea, but became extinct in all but Tasmania around 2000 years ago. Thylacine. The Tasmanian tiger was not a fast runner and hunted at night in pairs, tiring its prey by relentless pursuit, before killing it with a powerful bite. Since kangaroos and wallabies were its main source of food it inhabited open forest and woodlands. Being at the top of the food chain the species probably did not occur in large numbers. Numbers were reduced by human hunting (it unfortunately developed a taste for sheep as food!) and possibly by an outbreak of disease. The species became extinct in other parts of Australia, probably as a result of competition with the dingo, introduced into Australia around 3500-4000 years ago by Asian sailors. There are no dingos in Tasmania, which became separated from the Australian mainland between 8 000 - 10 000 years ago. Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 9 If you think about the evolution, survival and extinction of this species of marsupial then you may draw the following conclusions. • The thylacine must have evolved from some marsupial ancestor after Australia broke away from Antarctica. • During the changes in climate, as Australia drifted north, the new species evolved to be adapted to the role of ‘top’ carnivore in the woodland ecosystems, which arose as a result of the drying of the continent. • However, no individuals in thylacine populations had the genetic make-up necessary for the species to adapt to: – the competition from the introduced dingo on the mainland, – the hunting pressure from humans in Tasmania – some deadly disease organism. Like more than 99% of species which have evolved on Earth, the thylacine became extinct. But, it was helped along the way by human intervention by the introduction of a new competitor, hunting and possibly the introduction of a disease not normally found in Australia and one to which some animals had no natural resistance. Do Exercise 6.1. 10 Evolution of Australian biota Summary Now attempt the self-test, which will test a range of learning material and skills which you have covered in this module. Before starting on this exercise, read back through your notes and assignments to familiarise yourself again with material which perhaps you have not looked at for some time. Multiple choice 1 2 The concept of the environment favouring the survival and reproduction of the most adapted features or the elimination of the least adapted was proposed by: A Charles Darwin and Thomas Huxley. B Thomas Huxley and Bishop Wilberforce. C Alfred Wallace and Charles Darwin. D Alfred Wallace and Thomas Huxley. On his visit to Australia on the HMS Beagle Charles Darwin is often said to have been uninterested by the flora and fauna of this country. Which statement is the best interpretation of Darwin’s experience with the flora and fauna of Australia? A Darwin was unable to identify most of the species and so took little interest in them. B Darwin carried out considerable collecting and although naturalists before him had already identified many species, he also found new ones. C Darwin was very interested by the geology of Australia but paid little attention to its flora and fauna. D Darwin watched platypuses swimming in the Coxs River near what is now Lithgow, but apart from that, he saw few of Australia’s native species. Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 11 3 4 5 12 More than half of the land area of Australia is said to be arid. Which statement is the best definition for arid conditions? A An environment where rainfall is very low and evaporation is very high. B An area with hot but humid conditions C A hot, windy and dusty environment. D An environment which is always has low rainfall and high temperatures. There are two types of cell division, one involved with growth, repair and asexual reproduction and the other strictly with sexual reproduction. Meiotic cell division results in the formation of:; A two daughter cells which are genetically different from each other B four daughter cells with half the genetic complement of the original cells C four daughter cells which have fairly similar genetic make-up D two daughter cells which are genetically identical to each other. The giant southern landmass of Gondwana consisted of the following tectonic plates: A African, South American, Indo-Australian and Pacific B Indo-Australian, Antarctic, African, South American C Antarctic, Pangaean, Indo-Australian and South American D African, South American, Pangaean and Pacific. Evolution of Australian biota Short Response Questions 6 The following have been used as evidence that Australia was once part of a single large southern continent. • continental margins • spreading zones between continental plates • fossils evidence • similarities between modern and fossil species Choose two of these and briefly explain how they show a relationship between the past and present landmasses. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 7 Scientific study has led to a better understanding of the biology of many species of organisms in Australia. Use an example you have studied to answer the following questions. a) Describe an Australian species which has become better understood as a result of the use of modern technology. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 13 b) Briefly describe the technology used to determine the nature of this adaptation. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 8 After Australia broke from Antarctica it drifted north and experienced considerable climatic and geographical change. During this time new species evolved as a result of the following factors. • genetic variation • habitat changes • isolation and • natural selection. Use these factors in a description of proposed steps which take place in the formation of a new species. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 9 In your studies you investigated variation within two species. a) Name one of these species and state what variable characteristic you decided to measure. __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 14 Evolution of Australian biota b) Describe how you went about measuring this characteristic, including how many individuals you measured. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ c) Present your results either as a table of values or as a graph showing the distribution of different measurements. _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ Check your answers. Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 15 16 Evolution of Australian biota Suggested answers Mass extinctions 1 The Miocene period in Australia was thought to have been wet and to have varied in temperature between being hot and cold, with rainforests dominated the region. However, by late in the period species in the Eucalyptus and Casuarina genera were beginning to be more common. Mammals and birds dominated the vertebrate fauna, probably including aquatic forms such as several platypus species. 2 Fossils. For example, a sequence of fossilised leaves or pollen from rainforest and then Eucalyptus plants would indicate wet and then drier conditions. Fossils of parts of such species as platypus, turtles and water birds indicates a past aquatic environment. Higher growth rates seen in tree rings at the start of the period indicate wet conditions and drier later. 3 Air trapped in ice cores indicate higher levels of carbon dioxide since the start of the Industrial Revolution than previous years. Growth rings in trees can also be used as plant growth increases with increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Summary 1 C Darwin and Wallace came up with the idea of natural selection independently of each other at about the same time. 2 B Darwin expressed the thoughts in a letter that there would be few new species which had not been identified by naturalist who had visited Australia before him but also carried out his own collecting and described new species. 3 A Although all of Australia’s arid areas are also hot in summer, conditions are often cold in winter, and in other areas of the world arid conditions can be cold and dry. Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 17 4 B The genetic material in the daughter cells (gametes) is halved by the second division during meiosis. 5 B Gondwana included India and Australia (Indo-Australian), South America, Africa as well as Antarctica. 6 The margins of continents, especially the continental shelves and rock strata show good fit between parts of the continents which are now separated, suggesting that they were once joined. The existence of spreading zones between plates provides evidence that the plates are in fact moving in relation to each other. Fossils of similar groups, like the marsupials and early plants, such as species of Glossopteris have been found on other southern continents, suggesting that they got there when the continents were initially joined to each other. Living species, such as the flightless ratite birds (emus and cassowaries in Australia, rheas in South America, the extinct elephant birds of Africa and the kiwi and extinct moas of New Zealand), suggest that they evolved before the break-up of the supercontinent. 7 a) The platypus was thought to be like a reptile and was not able to regulate its body temperature. However, measurements of body temperature in captive and free-ranging platypuses enabled scientists to discover that it did regulate its body temperature, enabling it to survive in the cold conditions found in much of its range in winter. b) Radio telemetry was used in these studies where a transmitter measuring body temperature was attached to animals and the signal picked up by a receiver on the river bank. 8 As conditions change, many individuals do not have genetic variations which adapt them to the new conditions. As a result most become extinct but those have a suitable genetic make-up survive and reproduce. Their offspring are adapted to the new conditions and so these characteristics are passed on to the next generation. If the group of organisms is isolated from other groups of the same species this process of natural selection may quite quickly lead to the formation of a new species. 9 a) Number of striped periwinkles with stripes of varying widths. b) 20 individuals in each of 3 stripe classes were measured using vernier callipers. 18 Evolution of Australian biota c) Stripe category wide stripes Frequency (numbers of individuals in the sample) 3 (> 2 mm wide) medium stripes 25 (1-2 mm wide) narrow stripes 2 (< 1mm wide) Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 19 20 Evolution of Australian biota Exercises - Part 6 Exercises 6.1 Name: _________________________________ Exercise 6.1: Extinction Choose one or more species of Australian animal or plant which has either become extinct throughout Australia or has reduced its previous distribution in Australia. Find out the following: • Which group the organisms belongs to and therefore what might have been its ancestral group. • Its adaptations to the habitat in which the organisms was found. • The changes in the organism’s ecosystem to which the population has been unable to adapt and which have led to its extinction. To do this you will need to consult a range or sources, including the Internet (if you have access to it) CD ROMs, library books and magazines, such at Australian Geographic and Nature Australia (published by the Australian Museum). You may also choose to use the information in this part. a) Outline reasons for the extinction of at least one Australian species. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ b) Describe the adaptations that assisted the survival of at least one Australian species. _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Part 6: Evolution, survival and extinction 21 c) Name one Australian species that has become extinct. Propose reasons for the extinction of this organism. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 22 Evolution of Australian biota Student evaluation of the module Name: ______________________ Location: ____________________ We need your input! Can you please complete this short evaluation to provide us with information about this module. This information will help us to improve the design of these materials for future publications. 1 Did you find the information in the module clear and easy to understand? _____________________________________________________ 2 What did you most like learning about? Why? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 3 Which sort of learning activity did you enjoy the most? Why? _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 4 Did you complete the module within 30 hours? (Please indicate the approximate length of time spent on the module.) _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 5 Do you have access to the appropriate resources? eg. a computer, the Internet, scientific equipment, chemicals, people that can provide information and help with understanding science _____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Please return this information to your teacher, who will pass it along to the materials developers at OTEN – DE. BIO.Prelim 43211 Evolution of Australian biota Learning Materials Production Open Training and Education Network – Distance Education NSW Department of Education and Training