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Evolution Part 2 By the end of this class you should understand: • How genetic variation leads to natural selection and adaptive radiation • The different effects that environmental factors can have on populations • The nature of sexual selection and sexual competition • How genes can flow from one population to another and how speciation occurs Darwin’s Finches • The famous example of natural selection that led Darwin to make sense of the diversity of life was the finches on the Galapagos islands – They were clearly very similar but had different beaks on different islands – The beaks allowed them to eat different things Struggle for Existence • In an ordinary population, there is a “struggle for existence” (Darwin’s own words) that keeps populations at about the same size from year to year despite rapid reproduction – Darwin calculated that two breeding elephants with no death except from old age would sire a population of 15 million in 500 years • When the first finches arrived at this island, they found no predators and no competition and so they didn’t have the same struggle Genetic Variation • Genetic variation is normal in all populations thanks to mutations that make recessive and codominant alleles – This includes for important things like beak shape • Normally, the only food the bird has a chance at getting is the food that the bird’s beak is already specialized to get – There’s a fierce competition for all the foods! Brave New World • When a population arrives at a new, untapped area, the population will grow quickly, which means many unusual mutations that normally get weeded out quickly will instead become part of the population – Slightly thicker and slightly more curved beaks • These finches will happen to find other foods are easier to get with their unusual beak! – All random chance! Adaptive Radiation • Anytime a population suddenly finds a lack of competition, the variations that are normally weeded out expand into new species • This is known as adaptive radiation – Very different from regular radiation • Can you think of another example of this?... Permian Extinction! • The end of the Permian era saw a mass die-off of most large animals and almost all marine life – Lystrosaurus went extinct -> • In the late Permian and early Triassic, dinosaurs evolved, at first represented by only a few species – Coelophysis -> • By the Jurassic era, dinosaurs had undergone adaptive radiation to a multitude of species! – Behold! -> Adaptive Radiation in Action Danger and Opportunity • It seems that the most species changes happen when the environment changes the most • When the environment is stable, the most successful organisms resemble their successful parents, and the species becomes more specialized • Catastrophes are also opportunities for new species to emerge and dominate – Mammals did this too! Quantifying Opportunity • A species cannot grow a new feature simply by trying, the mutations must exist in the gene pool already • Many mutations are lethal mutations or neutral mutations but occasionally one appears that makes a different phenotype – Whether it’s beneficial or not depends on the environment! “Beneficial” Mutation • One organism’s beneficial mutation is another organism’s harmful mutation – It all depends on the environment! • In the 1800s, when the Industrial Revolution hit England, a lot of the trees with light-colored lichen became soot-covered and the lichen died – The light-colored Peppered Moth that camouflaged on the tree had a new problem Brain Check! • What environmental pressures were acting on this moth? • Which of these pressures might be altered by having the trees change color?... The Birds! • Birds are monstrous creatures to insects, and they hunt primarily by sight • Being visible to birds is a serious threat for these moths • Thanks to genetic variation, there was already a rare recessive allele that caused the moth to be dark instead of light – Guess who suddenly had the advantage! Change in Allele Frequency Gene Pool Changes • When organisms with one allele become more common than those with another allele, this is called a change in allele frequency • If these changes are in response to the environment (which they usually are) it is referred to as microevolution • If the changes are random, it is referred to as genetic drift More on the Peppered Moth • The light-dark moth saga is an example of directional selection, when one attribute (being lighter or darker) is strictly better than the other in a given environment • Once pollution controls went into effect, the light moths became more prevalent again • Evolution happens at the speed of reproduction, so bacteria evolve super fast, insects evolve fast, and mammals evolve slowly Directional Selection • Directional Selection is what happens when one particular environmental factor changes that benefits one part of the population more than another – Camouflage changes and one particular predator is a serious threat • In reality, there are usually many threats with many possible solutions – Not all predators hunt by sight! Disruptive Selection • Another type of selection is disruptive selection, when having more or less of a particular trait is favored – One example is the African Seedcracker, where large or small bills are helpful when food is scarce • Currently these two phenotypes interbreed freely Speciation • The African Seedcrackers are liable to ultimately undergo speciation (one species becoming two) – Why? The large-bills that mate with the small-bills will mostly have intermediate-bill babies that will die off when food is scarce • If any large-bill birds develop a genetic preference for mating with other large-bills, their offspring will have two traits: – Large bills – A preference for mating with other large-bills Sexual Selection • Animals do not typically mate randomly but instead choose their mates intentionally – This choice can be driven by “preference” which can be genetic in nature • This means if some trait will result in more viable offspring, ultimately more animals will prefer to mate with animals with this trait – This is because they actively chose to mate with animals that had this trait – This is known as sexual selection Brain Check! • What are things that are considered “attractive” in humans? • Why might we humans be undergoing sexual selection for these traits? Additional Sexual Selection • Peacocks are well-known to have massive tails which are a hindrance to surviving in the wild – The ladies LOVE a survivor – Also requires good health to maintain all those feathers symmetrically • This is an example of sexual dimorphism – Many animals exhibit traits found only in one gender, almost always sexual selection Sexual Dimorphism! Fun Fact! • The larger owl is in fact the female! • Larger males seem to be selected for with larger harems • Birds of prey are one of the few species that are naturally monogamous, and the females are larger in most of these cases – No, humans are NOT naturally monogamous • Chimpanzees have a similar gender size ratio and the dominant male mates with all the ladies in the group – No I am NOT encouraging you to cheat on your significant other Sexual Priorities in Mammals • Consider that males can pass on their genes to as many offspring as they can father – Male goal: mate as much as possible • Females, on the other hand, grow the next generation inside their bodies and also literally provide food for the babies out of their own body – Female goal: mate with a successful and healthy male – Additional goal: mate with a male who will actually stick around and help This explains a lot of cultural problems: Bottlenecks and Founder Effect • Additional force in evolution is a bottleneck – A bottleneck is when a population loses many individuals in a catastrophe of some kind and alleles are lost in the process • Another version is the founder effect: only a few organisms make it to a new island – The resulting population only has as much diversity as those founders Gene Flow • In large populations, genetic drift (random variation of allele frequency) and bottlenecks are not really a problem • In smaller populations they can be an issue, but often organisms travel from one area to another and mate in the new region – Referred to as gene flow – This maintains genetic diversity Lack of Gene Flow • If two populations become isolated (no more gene flow), the allele frequencies will begin to diverge from each other – Especially if the environments are different! • This ultimately will result again in speciation – In particular this is known as allopatric speciation, where the organisms are physically separated – The previous example of African Seedcrackers would be a case of sympatric speciation, where the organisms are still in close proximity See you in lab!