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Geology 105 - History of Earth Name ____________________________________ Darwin’s Finches: Adaptations and Natural Selection The objectives of this lab are to: o Understand individual variations within a population, and how natural selection acts upon these variations o Explore how changes to the environment affect food resources and the differential reproductive success of individuals o Explain how natural selection can lead to the evolution of new species o Interpret the role of random change (mutations) and non-random change (natural selection) in evolution Materials: o Printed copy of lab exercise o Pencil o Island (astroturf), food resources (rubber bands, beans, seeds, rice, playdoh), beaks (needle nose pliers, blunt pliers, tongs, tweezers, staple pickers), dice, dishes/food trays Instructions: Get into groups of 4 or 5 students. Read over the introductory information, and begin answering the questions. Once all the groups have finished with the first exercise of this lab, the instructor will begin preparing you for the second exercise. INTRODUCTION: In this lab, your group will be recreating the conditions of an experiment played by nature approximately 3 million years ago, when a group of South American birds was blown by a storm or a tsunami 600 miles offshore to the brand new volcanic islands of the Galapagos, trapping them there. What happened next? We are looking particularly at the island of Daphne Major as a model for your island home: a small cinder cone with no trees and very little fresh water. Here’s some background on your new home: despite being on the Equator, cold water brought north from Antarctica by the Humboldt Current keeps this island from getting too hot. But it is very dry, with not enough water to support trees. 1 A rainy season occurs from January to May, when warm wet water from the north brings moisture. No rain falls for the rest of the year, from June to December. The climate here is also greatly affected by a cycle in ocean temperature every 7-10 years known as El Niño (sea surface temperatures heat up, resulting in heavy rainfall/floods) and La Niña (sea surface temperatures cool down, resulting in droughts). We’ll discuss plate tectonics, climate, and currents in a later lab, but for now, that’s all you need to know! SO. Your group of finches lands here. Your food options are limited, and only those individuals who are able to get enough food to live will survive to reproduce. Exercise 1: Exploring Variation Within A Species A. List at least three physical features that you and your teammates have in common as a species (members of Homo sapiens). Ex: all 5 have eyelashes, all 5 have fingers B. Describe how those three physical features VARY among your classmates. You can use rulers (quantitative measurements) or general descriptions (qualitative observations). Ex: members 2&3 have longer eyelashes; members 1,4&5 have shorter C. These variations between individuals is a result of RANDOM MUTATION during sexual reproduction – we won’t go into the mechanics of mutation here (take a genetics course for the nitty gritty on this!), but you should be aware that mutation is introduced to a population through sexual reproduction and slight mistakes can occur when male and female DNA combine. Also be aware that these variations are HERITABLE and can be passed on to offspring. For the purposes of this lab, you are all now members of the same species of South American bird, the blueblack grassquit. You have many traits in common and are able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring, but there are some slight variations, just like the ones you listed on for humans – for example, in the slight color differences of the feathers, or in the shape and size of your beaks. NOW. With all that in mind, pick a beak from the stack of tools at the table and describe it here. NOTE: IF YOU ARE IN A GROUP OF 4, do NOT choose the tweezers – leave them out. 2 Give a brief description of each beak below, and circle your own chosen beak. Tweezers: _______________________________________________________________________ Staple-picker: ____________________________________________________________________ Tongs: __________________________________________________________________________ Blunt pliers: _____________________________________________________________________ Needle-nosed pliers: _______________________________________________________________ The food resources on the island are as follows. Since we can’t provide the actual grubs and insects and spiky caltrops seeds found on the islands and eaten by the finches, we’ve provided the closest possible analogue for you guys to “eat.” water plants (rubber bands, which can be eaten more than one at a time) insects (rice grains, must be picked up one at a time) spurge seeds (small seeds, must be picked up one at a time) caltrops seeds (white beans, - no spikes as we see in the wild, but the hard seed case must still be crushed in order for the nutritious inner seed to be eaten; think a nastier smaller version of a walnut!) cactus grubs (playdoh in cups – you can pick up the cup in your hand, but must use a toothpick placed in your beak to pierce the grubs through a hole in the side) D. Based on your beak’s size and shape, make a prediction which foods you will be the best at eating, and which you will be the worst at. _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ E. But not all food is created equal – some resources are more nutritious than others. Let’s say your bird needs 300 calories minimum to survive a year (since we don’t have a year, we’re using 30 seconds to model your survival). If: 1 water plant (rubber band) = 10 calories 1 spurge seed (small seed) = 30 calories 1 insect (rice) = 50 calories 1 cactus grub (playdoh in cup) = 60 calories 1 caltrops seeds (beans) = 40 calories How many do you need to survive? ______ How many do you need to survive? ______ How many do you need to survive? ______ How many do you need to survive? ______ How many do you need to survive? _____ 3 Exercise 2: Practice with Your Beaks and Food Resources Before we begin, we’re giving you a chance to get used to handling your beaks/the food resources. We’ll have five 30 second practice rounds. HOW TO CREATE YOUR PRACTICE ROUND ISLANDS: When you’ve finished setting up/cleaning up between rounds, please raise your hands so the professor knows when all the groups are ready to get started. The professor will give a 3 second countdown, and then you have 30 seconds to obtain as much food as possible. Remember the rules for how to eat each food! Caltrops seeds have to be cracked, insects can only be eaten one at a time, etc. 30 seconds of just Water plants – scatter 1 food dish full of rubber bands for this practice round. When done, return rubber bands to bag. 30 seconds of just Insects – scatter a palmful of rice grains, shake out back onto table when done 30 seconds of just Spurge seeds – scatter a palmful of small seeds onto island, return to bag at end. 30 seconds of just Cactus grubs – set out 5 cups, with 5 grubs per cup 30 seconds of just Caltrops seeds – set out 25 white beeds, and be sure to discard the cracked seeds when done in trash can DON’T CALCULATE THE CALORIES FOR THE PRACTICE ROUND, just make general observations. Assuming food resources are limited, which 3 foods do you predict each bird should focus on eating to get the minimum 300 calories needed to survive? Tweezers: _______________________________________________________________________ Staple-picker: ____________________________________________________________________ Tongs: __________________________________________________________________________ Blunt pliers: _____________________________________________________________________ Needle-nosed pliers: _______________________________________________________________ 4 Exercise 3: LIFE AND DEATH, or SURVIVAL AND REPRODUCTION OKAY, PRACTICE ROUNDS: OVER. Remember, your finches have landed on a hypothetical island – please come up with a name for this island with your group. However, assume it looks basically identical to Daphne Major and is located in the same general area/circumstances. YOUR ISLAND NAME: ____________________________ Now that the practice is over, on to the life and death competition. You have 30 seconds to get enough food to survive and more importantly, to reproduce. The bird with the LEAST amount of food at the end of the round dies and doesn’t pass on its genes. The bird with the MOST calories has lots of babies and will pass on the most genes to the next generation. This is a competition! NOT EVERYONE CAN SURVIVE. Will it be you or your friend who dies? Don’t forget to eat strategically – you can eat more than one type of food! Think of it as a more complex version of Hungry Hungry Hippos: food is limited on this island, and you only have so much time to get enough calories. Some foods are richer than others, and some are easier to obtain than others. At the end of the 30 seconds, count up the food items you consumed and calculate the total # of calories for each member of your group. Be sure to record everyone’s numbers! Practice for the real world Hunger Games 5 YEAR 1: THE FIRST GENERATION HOW TO CREATE YOUR YEAR 1 ISLAND: Mix and scatter the following amounts of foods on your “island” square of astroturf. When finished, please raise your hands so the professor knows when all the groups are ready to get started. Water plants – scatter ½ a food dish full of rubber bands Spurge seeds – scatter a quarter-sized amount of rice grains Insects – scatter 30 small seeds onto island Cactus grubs – set out 4 cups, with 2 grubs per cup Caltrops seeds – set out 20 white beans You now have 30 seconds to obtain enough food to survive. Record your group’s numbers below. YOUR GROUP’S #s Tweezers Tongs Staple-picker Needle-nose Blunt pliers Water plants/rubber bands (10 cal) Insects/rice grains (50 cal) Spurge seeds/small seeds (30 cal) Caltrops seeds/white beans (60 cal) Cactus grubs/playdoh in cup (40 cal) Total # calories consumed: Which beak/tool-type got the most calories for this round (aka was fat and happy and had lots of babies)? ____________________ Which beak/tool-type got the least calories for this round (aka died and had no babies)? ____________________ If your beak-type died, you do not get to contribute offspring to the next generation! Instead pick up a new beak, aka the tool which had the highest average calorie intake. 6 YEAR 2: THE SECOND GENERATION How has the population of finches changed from the previous generation? List the # of beaks you have of each type. Tweezers: ____ Staple-picker: ____ Tongs: ____ Blunt pliers: ____ Needle-nosed pliers: ____ Unfortunately, this is a La Niña year (unusually cool sea surface conditions in equatorial waters, resulting in a much drier climate in this part of the world), and as a result for 365 days no rain has fallen. This changes the amount of food resources available. HOW TO CREATE YOUR YEAR 2 ISLAND: Mix and scatter the following amounts of foods on your “island” square of astroturf. When finished, please raise your hands so the professor knows when all the groups are ready to get started. Water plants – 15 rubber bands scattered Spurge seeds – scatter 20 small seeds Insects – scatter a nickel-sized amount of rice grains Cactus grubs – set out 2 cups, with 2 grubs per cup Caltrops seeds – set out 30 white beans – turns out the drought has increased their numbers! HOWEVER, A MUTATION HAS OCCURRED IN THE STAPLE-PICKER BIRDS! The vampire mutation – see video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d39oZ_TYImY), which your professor should play on the SMART Board. These birds now are able to gain an extra +50 calories by strategically drinking the blood of their fellow birds during times of food scarcity. (Please, however, do not actually stab your fellow birds) You now have 30 seconds to obtain enough food to survive. Record your group’s numbers below. YOUR GROUP’S #s Water plants/rubber bands (10 cal) Insects/rice grains (50 cal) Spurge seeds/small seeds (30 cal) Caltrops seeds/white beans (60 cal) Cactus grubs/playdoh in cup (40 cal) Total # calories consumed: Which beak/tool-type got the most calories for this round (aka was fat and happy and had lots of babies)? ____________________ Which beak/tool-type got the least calories for this round (aka died and had no babies)? ____________________ If your beak-type died, you do not get to contribute offspring to the next generation! Instead pick up a new beak, aka the tool which had the highest average calorie intake. 7 YEAR 3: THE THIRD GENERATION How has the population of finches changed from the previous generation? List the # of beaks you have of each type. Tweezers: ____ Staple-picker: ____ Tongs: ____ Blunt pliers: ____ Needle-nosed pliers: ____ Unfortunately, La Niña continues, and now for over 500 days no rain has fallen. This drastically changes the amount of food resources available. Also, remember the vampire mutation? Those who with the vampire mutation who survived have passed the mutation on to their offspring, so the blood-drinking continues! HOW TO CREATE YOUR YEAR 3 ISLAND: Mix and scatter the following amounts of foods on your “island” square of astroturf. When finished, please raise your hands so the professor knows when all the groups are ready to get started. Water plants – 5 rubber bands scattered Spurge seeds – scatter 15 small seeds Insects – scatter a dime-sized amount of rice grains Cactus grubs – set out 2 cups, with 2 grubs per cup Caltrops seeds – set out 35 white beans You now have 30 seconds to obtain enough food to survive. Record your group’s numbers below. YOUR GROUP’S #s Water plants/rubber bands (10 cal) Insects/rice grains (50 cal) Spurge seeds/small seeds (30 cal) Caltrops seeds/white beans (60 cal) Cactus grubs/playdoh in cup (40 cal) Total # calories consumed: Which beak/tool-type got the most calories for this round (aka was fat and happy and had lots of babies)? ____________________ Which beak/tool-type got the least calories for this round (aka died and had no babies)? ____________________ If your beak-type died, you do not get to contribute offspring to the next generation! Instead pick up a new beak, aka the tool which had the highest average calorie intake. 8 YEAR 4: THE FOURTH GENERATION How has the population of finches changed from the previous generation? List the # of beaks you have of each type. Tweezers: ____ Staple-picker: ____ Tongs: ____ Blunt pliers: ____ Needle-nosed pliers: ____ Things have drastically changed on Daphne Major! This is an El Niño year – warm humid waters have been moving south down from the Equator). As a result, there’s been torrents of rain, and the spurge plants and water plants have taken over the island, choking out the caltrops plants that formerly dominated. ALSO, recessive genes and inbreeding among limited population numbers has resulted in a beak type reappearing. Everyone should take turns rolling the dice – if you get a 5 or a 6, take up THE TONGS as your new beak. HOW TO CREATE YOUR YEAR 4 ISLAND: Mix and scatter the following amounts of foods on your “island” square of astroturf. When finished, please raise your hands so the professor knows when all the groups are ready to get started. Water plants – 50 rubber bands scattered (don’t forget, you can grab more than one of these at a time!) Spurge seeds – scatter 40 small seeds Insects – scatter a quarter-sized amount of rice grains Cactus grubs – set out 4 cups, with 2 grubs per cup Caltrops seeds – set out 10 white beans You now have 30 seconds to obtain enough food to survive. Record your group’s numbers below. YOUR GROUP’S #s Water plants/rubber bands (10 cal) Insects/rice grains (50 cal) Spurge seeds/small seeds (30 cal) Caltrops seeds/white beans (60 cal) Cactus grubs/playdoh in cup (40 cal) Total # calories consumed: Which beak/tool-type got the most calories for this round (aka was fat and happy and had lots of babies)? ____________________ Which beak/tool-type got the least calories for this round (aka died and had no babies)? ____________________ If your beak-type died, you do not get to contribute offspring to the next generation! Instead pick up a new beak, aka the tool which had the highest average calorie intake. 9 YEAR 5: THE FIFTH GENERATION How has your population of finches changed from the previous generation? List the # of beaks you have of each type. Tweezers: ____ Staple-picker: ____ Tongs: ____ Blunt pliers: ____ Needle-nosed pliers: ____ Go to the board, and list your Island name, and the above numbers. Copy the numbers from the other islands around the room. Island ______________ Tweezers: Staple-picker: Tongs: Blunt pliers: Needle-nosed pliers: Island ______________ Tweezers: Staple-picker: Tongs: Blunt pliers: Needle-nosed pliers: Island ______________ Tweezers: Staple-picker: Tongs: Blunt pliers: Needle-nosed pliers: Island ______________ Tweezers: Staple-picker: Tongs: Blunt pliers: Needle-nosed pliers: Island ______________ Tweezers: Staple-picker: Tongs: Blunt pliers: Needle-nosed pliers: ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 10 1. How do your group’s numbers compare to the rest of the classes numbers? Do you have any identical islands, or are some different? _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Discuss this with your group and explain what could have caused the differences. _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. You should see a GENERAL trend in evolution of the finch population of the islands. If we had more groups the statistical average would be more obvious, but alas, we only have 5-6 experimental islands to work with. Given what we have, though, what is the most common beak type? ___________________________ 4. Why do you think that beak was better at surviving/reproducing than the others? _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ DARWIN’S CONCEPT OF EVOLUTION THROUGH NATURAL SELECTION is based on some of the concepts you’ve just observed through our classroom experiment. 1. 2. 3. 4. More organisms are born than can survive given the resources of the environment. Those organisms are not all exactly the same – random variation exists within a population. Some of those variations will be better at obtaining food/mates than others. Those variations will have DIFFERENTIAL REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS – aka, be more likely to survive and reproduce, passing on their genes to the next generation. 5. This causes the population to EVOLVE, or change over time. 6. Over enough time, new species can emerge from an ancestral group. Looking at your population of finches, what do you predict will happen to the average beak type if the El Niño conditions continue for another three years? Explain your reasoning. _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ 11 Exercise 4: Findings and Analysis Fast-forward 2-3 million years, assuming the process of natural selection is still occurring. There are now 14-15 species of finch living on the different Galapagos Islands. Darwin encountered these different finch species when he visited in 1835 and eventually observed they were all closely related to each other, and that they bore a resemblance to the current blueblack grassquit living in South America. Keep in mind that not all the Galapagos islands have the same conditions – for example, some have higher elevation and thus more rainfall as a whole, because higher elevation = cooler temperature = moist air condenses as precipitation = more rain. 1. Which finch would you match to which tool type from our experiment, and why? Be sure to justify/explain your answers in the space below the pictures. 2. What do you predict would be the most common food resource on this bird’s island, and why? The sharp-beaked ground finch aka the vampire finch (Geospiza difficilis): Tool type: ____________ Why? Food type: ____________ Why? The large ground finch (Geospiza magnirostrus): Tool type: ____________ Why? Food type: ___________ Why? The small ground finch (Geospiza fulignosa): The woodpecker finch (Camarhynchus pallidus): Tool type:___________ Why? Food type: __________ Why? Tool type: ____________ Why? Food type: ____________ Why? The vegetarian finch (Platyspiza crassirostris): Tool type: ______________ Why? Food type: _____________ Why? 12 3. Based on your data/observations, explain how a single population (i.e. finches with one type of beak) could diversify and populate different areas of different islands in the region. How does natural selection contribute to adaptation(s)? Use the specific examples of birds and their beak-types to explain your answer. _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. Read the excerpt from Darwin’s journal below. This is one of Darwin’s earliest interpretations of adaptations in finches on the Galapagos Islands. What does he mean by the statement, “Seeing this gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an original paucity* of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different ends”? (*definition of PAUCITY: a scarcity, or a small number) _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ Darwin’s notes, made during his voyage on the HMS Beagle, after arriving in the Galapagos Islands in 1835: “…The remaining land-birds form a most singular group of finches, related to each other in the structure of their beaks, short tails, form of body, and plumage: there are thirteen species, which….may be divided into four subgroups. All these species are peculiar to this archipelago; and so is the whole group, with the exception of one species of the sub-group Cactornis, lately brought from Bow Island, in the Low Archipelago. Of Cactornis, the two species may be often seen climbing about the flowers of the great cactus-trees; but all the other species of this group of finches, mingled together in flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground of the lower districts. The males of all, or certainly of the greater number, are jet black; and the females (with perhaps one or two exceptions) are brown. The most curious fact is the perfect gradation in the size of the beaks in the different species of Geospiza, from one as large as that of a hawfinch to that of a chaffinch, and … even to that of a warbler. The largest beak in the genus Geospiza is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but instead of their being only one intermediate species, with a beak of the size shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species with insensibly graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group Certhidea is shown in Fig. 4. The beak of Cactornis is somewhat like that of a starling; and that of the fourth sub-group, Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped. Seeing this gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different ends. In a like manner it might be fancied that a bird originally a buzzard had been induced here to undertake the office of the carrion-feeding Polybori of the American continent.” 13 5. Here are two individuals of Geospiza fortis, the medium groundfinch. Are they identical? Which tool-type would you compare to the finch on the left? The finch on the right? Which do you predict would be more likely to survive a La Niña drought year? What about an El Niño year? ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________ 6. Evolution is defined as descent with modification from a common ancestor by means of natural selection – ie, individuals with traits that better help them survive in their environment will pass on their genes to the next generation, changing it from its ancestral condition. Based on this and what you observed in class, does evolution produce “perfect” species? Why or why not? ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________ 7. This is a quote from the famous evolutionary biologist J. B. S. Haldane: "No scientific theory is worth anything unless it enables us to predict something which is actually going on. Until that is done, theories are a mere game of words, and not such a good game as poetry." Does this hold true in the short term for evolution, based on what you’ve learned today? ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________ 8. However, do you think you’ll be able to make accurate predictions in the long-term? (AKA over thousands of years?) Why or why not? ____________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ 9. Which of these three units can actually evolve over time? Explain: An individual __________________________________________________________________________________ A population (a specific geographic group of interbreeding individuals) __________________________________________________________________________________ A species (all populations capable of interbreeding) _________________________________________________________________ 14