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EVOLUTION IN LARGE POPULATIONS: SELECTION Influences upon genetic diversity and the evolution of populations Genetic Drift Mutation Natural Selection Migration The need to evolve • environmental change is ubiquitous – Pests, parasites, novel competitors, anthropogenic change, global warming, new diseases • Species must adapt and evolve to avoid extinction Adaptation • 3 forms of adaptation: Physiological, behavioural and genetic Physiological adaptation: change in metabolism or biochemistry to deal with an environmental problem Example: High-altitude adaptations in vertebrate haemoglobins • Increased blood O2 affinities at altitude • Linked to structural changes in haemoglobin molecules Weber (2007) Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology vol 158 132–142 Adaptation Behavioural adaptation: the things organisms do to survive Example: feeding specialisations in bottlenose dolphins in Shark Bay, WA • Subset of population uses sponges to probe substrate for fish • Recent co-ancestry • Vertical social transmission among females • Cultural transmission of tool use? Krützen et al. (2005) PNAS vol 102 8939- Adaptive evolution Adaptive evolution: long term evolutionary changes in response to natural selection upon superior genetic variants • Adaptive evolutionary changes in animals have been documented in: - morphology, behaviour, colour, prey size, body size, life history, disease tolerance and resistance, biocide resistance, tolerance to pollutants. • Plants evolve in response to: - soil conditions, light regimes, water stress, flooding, air pollution and herbicides. Plant populations adapted to diverse ecological conditions are so common that they have their own term, called ecotypes. Adaptive evolution and explosive speciation in cichlid fish Kocher, T (2004) Nature Reviews Genetics 5: 288-29 • Genetic adaptation and adaptive evolution is ubiquitous in species that have genetic diversity Adaptive evolution • Take home message: Adaptive evolution is ubiquitous in plants and animals that have genetic variation • Adaptive evolution is important in the following conservation contexts: - Preserving evolutionary potential - Adaptation to marginal environments - Genetic adaptation to captivity - Adaptation of invasive species - Outbreeding depression Natural Selection Evolving populations are complex systems • Evolving populations are complex systems influenced by mutation, migration, selection and chance operating within the context of the breeding system Competition Climate Disease Loss of genetic diversity Zygotes SELECTION CHANCE SAMPLING deaths Adults Mating MIGRATION Gametes Selection of mates MUTATION Introduction to Conservation Genetics 2 Fig 6.1 Evolving pop as complex systems.ppt Is Natural Selection the Same Thing as Evolution evolution is directional in producing all the life-forms on earth today from one or several ancestral life-forms billions of years ago Natural selection is an observable process that is often purported to be the underlying mechanism of unobservable molecules-toman evolution. Through natural selection, genetic information (variety) was lost. The long-fur dogs survive better in a cold environment; they are less able to survive in a warm environment and vice versa. A particular characteristic in the dog population was selected for. Dogs are still dogs since the variation is within the boundaries of “kind.” Selection on quantitative characters • Variation is determined by several loci and environmental effects • Selection affects phenotypic means and variances 3 forms of selection Directional selection:on quantitative characters: favours phenotypes toward one end of the distribution and shifts mean towards that extreme Stabilizing selection: favours phenotypic intermediates and reduces variation about the mean Disruptive Selection: favours both phenotypic extremes and increases variation Case study: directional selection Undesirable evolutionary consequences of trophy hunting in Bighorn sheep Coltman et al. (2003) Nature 426, 655-658 Directional selection: favours phenotypes toward one end of the distribution and shifts mean towards that extreme Case study: stabilizing selection Stabilizing selection for birth weight in humans after Mather, 1973 Stabilizing selection: favours phenotypic intermediates and reduces variation about the mean Case study: disruptive selection Disruptive Selection: favours both phenotypic extremes and increases variation about the mean Disruptive selection and then what? Rueffler et al. (2006) TREE 21, 238-245; Schulter and McPhail (1992) The American Naturalist 140: 85-108 B e n t h i c P l a n k f e e d