Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends Chapter 13 Asteroid Impacts • Many past catastrophic impacts altered the course of evolution • Iridium layer implicates asteroid in extinction of dinosaurs • Asteroids are still a threat Macroevolution Large-scale patterns, trends, and rates of change among families and other more inclusive groups of species Impacts, Issues Video Measuring Time Fossils • Recognizable evidence of ancient life What do Fossils Tell Us? • Each species is a mosaic of ancestral and novel traits • All species that ever evolved are related to one another by way of descent Stratification • Fossils are found in sedimentary rock • This type of rock is formed in layers • In general, layers closest to the top were formed most recently Sedimentary Rock Radiometric Dating • Organism becomes buried in ash or sediments • Organic remains become infused with metal and mineral ions • Carbon 14 dating Radiometric Dating parent isotope in newly formed rock after one half-life after two half-lives Radiometric Dating Radioisotope decay Radiometric dating Geologic Time Scale • Boundaries based on transitions in fossil record Phanerozoic eon Cenozoic era Mesozoic era Quaternary period Tertiary period 65 Cretaceous period 145 Jurassic period Triassic period Paleozoic era 213 248 Permian period 286 Carboniferous period 360 Devonian period Silurian period Ordovician period Cambrian Cambrianperiod period 410 440 505 544 Proterozoic eon Archean eon and earlier 2,500 mya Geologic time scale Record Is Incomplete • Fossils have been found for about 250,000 species • Most species weren’t preserved • Record is biased toward the most accessible regions Macroevolution • Major patterns and trends among lineages • Rates of change in geologic time Continental Drift • Continents were once joined and have since “drifted” apart • Initially based on shapes • Later supported by world distribution of fossils and existing species, orientation of particles in iron-rich rocks Plate Tectonics • Earth’s crust is fractured into plates Geologic forces Plate Tectonics • Movement of plates is driven by upwelling of molten rock at mid-oceanic ridges island arc oceanic crust lithosphere hot (solid layer of mantle) spot oceanic ridge trench athenosphere (plastic layer of mantle) continental crust subducting plate Fig. 13-6a, p.199 Plate margins Comparative Morphology • Comparing body forms and structures of major lineages • Guiding principle: – When it comes to introducing change in morphology, evolution tends to follow the path of least resistance 4 Morphological Divergence 3 early reptile 21 5 21 3 • Change from body form of a common ancestor 4 pterosaur 1 chicken 2 3 1 2 bat 3 4 • Produces homologous structures 1 5 porpoise 2 4 3 5 penguin 2 1 2 3 4 5 3 human Morphological divergence Morphological Convergence • Individuals of different lineages evolve in similar ways under similar environmental pressures • Produces analogous structures that serve similar functions Morphological Convergence Comparative Development • Each animal or plant proceeds through a series of changes in form • Similarities in these stages may be clues to evolutionary relationships • Mutations that disrupt a key stage of development are selected against Proportional Changes in Skull Mutation and proportional changes Molecular Evidence • Biochemical traits shared by species show how closely they are related • Can compare DNA, RNA, or proteins Biological Species Concept “Species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups.” Ernst Mayr Genetic Divergence • Gradual accumulation of differences in the gene pools of populations • Natural selection, genetic drift, and mutation can contribute to divergence • Gene flow counters divergence Reproductive Isolation • Cornerstone of the biological species concept • Speciation is the attainment of reproductive isolation • Reproductive isolation arises as a by-product of genetic change Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms • Prevent pollination or mating • Block fertilization or embryonic development • Cause offspring to be weak or sterile Reproductive Isolation Mechanisms Isolating Mechanisms Reproductive isolating mechanisms Prezygotic Isolation Mechanical isolation Temporal isolation Behavioral isolation Ecological isolation Gametic mortality Mechanical Isolation • Wasp and zebra orchid Temporal Isolation • Cicada Reproductive Isolation Temporal isolation among cicadas Behavioral Isolation • Albatrosses Reproductive Isolation Albatross courtship Postzygotic Mechanisms Early death Sterility Low survival rates Models for Speciation • Allopatric speciation • Sympatric speciation • Parapatric speciation Models for Speciation Models of Speciation Allopatric Speciation • Speciation in geographically isolated populations • Some sort of barrier arises and prevents gene flow • Effectiveness of barrier varies with species Allopatric Speciation Extensive Divergence Prevents Inbreeding • Species separated by geographic barriers will diverge genetically • If divergence is great enough it will prevent inbreeding even if the barrier later disappears Archipelagos • Island chains some distance from continents – Galapagos Islands – Hawaiian Islands • Colonization of islands followed by genetic divergence sets the stage for speciation Models of Speciation Allopatric speciation on an archipelago Hawaiian Islands • Volcanic origins, variety of habitats • Adaptive radiations: – Honeycreepers: in absence of other bird species, they radiated to fill numerous niches Ancestral Type Housefinch (Carpodacus) Fig. 13-18d13, p.209 Speciation in Hawaiian Honeycreepers Akepa (Loxops coccineus) Fig. 13-18d1, p.209 Speciation without a Barrier • Sympatric speciation – Species forms within the home range of the parent species • Parapatric speciation – Neighboring populations become distinct species while maintaining contact along a common border Sympatric Speciation in African Cichlids • Studied fish species in two lakes – Species in each lake are most likely descended from single ancestor • No barriers within either lake Sympatric Speciation in African Cichlids • Feeding preferences localize species in different parts of lake Parapatric Speciation • Populations in contact along a common border giant velvet worm blind velvet worm We’re All Related • All species are related by descent • Share genetic connections that extend back in time to the prototypical cell Evolutionary Trees species 2 species 3 species 1 ancestral stock Summarize information about relationships among groups Evolutionary Trees Evolutionary tree diagram Gradual Model • Species emerge through many small changes accumulating over time • Fits well with evidence from certain lineages in fossil record Punctuation Model • Speciation model in which most changes in morphology are compressed into brief period near onset of divergence • Supported by fossil evidence in some lineages Adaptive Radiation • Burst of divergence • Single lineage gives rise to many new species • New species fill vacant adaptive zone • Adaptive zone is “way of life” • Cenozoic radiation of mammals Adaptive Radiations of Mammals Extinction • Irrevocable loss of a species • Mass extinctions play a major role in evolutionary history • Fossil record shows 20 or more largescale extinctions • Reduced diversity is followed by adaptive radiation Who Survives? • Species survival is somewhat random • Asteroids have repeatedly struck Earth, destroying many lineages • Changes in global temperature favor lineages that are widely distributed Taxonomy • The identification, naming, and classification of species • Somewhat subjective • Information about species can be interpreted differently Naming Species • Each species has a two-part name • First part is generic name • Second part is species name • Ursus arctos = brown bear Ursus americanus = black bear Bufo americanus = American toad Higher Taxa • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Inclusive groupings reflect assumed relationships among species Examples of Classification western juniper Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Plantae Coniferophyta Coniferopsida Cuoniferales Cupressaceae Juniperus J. occidentalis vanilla orchid Plantae Anthophyta Monocotyledonae Asparagales Orchidaceae Vanilla V. planifolia housefly Animalia Anthropoda Insecta Diptera Muscidae Musca M. domestica human Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hominidae Homo H. sapiens Phylogeny • The scientific study of evolutionary relationships among species • Practical applications – Allows predictions about the needs or weaknesses of one species on the basis of its known relationship to another Six-Kingdom Classification Bacteria Archaea Protists Plants Fungi Animals Three-Domain System Bacteria Archaea Eukarya Evolutionary Tree Evolutionary Tree Current evolutionary tree Table 13-1, p.216 Llama-Camel Hybrid