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Essentials of Ecology 3rd. Ed. Chap. 2 Ecology’s evolutionary backdrop 鄭先祐 (Ayo) 國立臺南大學 環境與生態學院 生物科技學系 生態學 (2008) Chap. 2 Ecology’s evolutionary backdrop • • • • • • • 2.1 introduction 2.2 evolution by natural selection 2.3 evolution within species 2.4 the ecology of speciation 2.5 effects of climatic change 2.6 effects of continental drift 2.7 convergents and parallels 2 2.1 introduction • Evolution: phenomenon and mechanism • Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace 3 2.2 evolution by natural selection • Hardy-Weinberg principle • Darwinism = isolation + natural selection • Neutralism = neutral mutation + genetic drift 4 2.3 Evolution within species • 2.3.1 Geographic variation within species • 2.3.2 Variation within a species with manmade selection pressures • 2.3.3 Evolution and coevolution 5 2.3.1 Geographic variation within species • Fig. 2.2 common garden experiments 6 • Fig. 2.3 those from the low elevation site had significantly better water use efficiency as well as having both taller and broader rosettes. 7 • Fig 2.4 (a) map of the site chosen. • (b) a vertical transect across the study area. • (C) the mean length of stolons produced in the experimental garden from samples taken from the transect. 8 • Fig. 2.5 相距1000公里遠,發芽率(%)才有顯著差 異。Chamaecrista fasciculata populaitons 9 • Fig. 2.2 (b) reciprocal transplant experiments 10 11 • Fig. 2.6 plants of white clover (苜蓿) 12 • Fig 2.7 two males and a female guppies Poecillia reticulata. Where guppies have been free from predators, the males are brightly decorated with different colored spots. 13 Fig 2.8(a) • R= with weak predators • K= controlled pond • C= with dangerous predators. 14 • Fig. 2.8 (b) • c= with the dangerous predator • X= no predator r= with weak predator 15 • Fig. 2.8 (c) • c= with the dangerous predator • X= no predator r= with weak predator 16 2.3.2 manmade selection pressures • Industrial melanism • Fig. 2.9 sites in Britain and ireland where the frequencies of the pale and melanic forms of Biston betularia 補充資料:天擇的範例: peppered moths (ppt檔案) 17 • Fig. 2.10 change in the frequency of the carbonaria form of the peppered moth in the Manchester area since 1950. 18 • Fig. 2.11 the grass colonizes land heavily contaminated with Zinc on old mines. 19 2.3.3 Evolution and coevolution • Evolution • Coevolution (chap. 8) – Mutualists – Pollinators and their plants, – Leguminous plants and their nitrogen-fixing bacteria 20 2.4 the ecology of speciation • 2.4.1 What do we mean by a ‘species’? • 2.4.2 islands and speciation 21 2.4.1 what do we mean by a ‘species’? • species – Biospecies – Typo-species • speciation – Orthodox speciation – Allopatric speciation – Sympatric speciation – Radiated speciation (radiation) • Evolution in sea gulls (海鷗) 22 • Fig. 2.13 two species of gull have diverged from a common ancestry. 23 2.4.2 islands and speciation • Galapagos finches 24 • Fig. 2.15 poorly dispersing have a higher proportion of endemic species. 25 2.5 Effects of climatic change on the evolution and distribution of species • 16 glacial cycles in the Pleistocene, each lasting for up to 125,000 years (Fig.2.16a) • Each cold (glacial) phase may have lasted for as long as 50,000-100,000 years, • with brief intervals of only 10,000-20,000 years when the temperatures rose to, or above, those of today. 26 27 • Fig. 2.17 the elevation ranges of 10 species of woody plant from the mountains of the Sheep range during the last glaciation (dots) and at present (solid line) 28 • Fig. 2.18 (a) the present-day distribution of tropical forest in South America. • (b) the possible distribution of tropical forest refuges at the time when the last glaciation was at its peak. 29 2.6 continental drift • Fig. 2.19 (a) changes in temperature in the North sea over the past 65million years. 30 • Fig. 2.19 31 • Fig. 2.19 32 • Fig. 2.20 (a) 33 非洲 非洲 南美洲 澳洲 澳洲 • Fig. 2.20 (a) 34 • Rhea (南美洲) • Ostrich (非洲) 35 2.7 convergents and parallels • Convergent evolution – Bird and bat wings are a classic example • Parallel evolution – Placental and marsupial mammals Fig. 2.21 convergent evolution 36 • Fig. 2.22 parallel evolution 37 Boxes • 2.1 Historical landmarks: a brief history of the study of diversity • 2.2 Topical ECOncerns: deep sea vent communities at risk 38 Questions 1. Is sexual selection, as practiced by guppies different from or just part of natural selection? 2. The process of evolution can be interpreted as optimizing the fit between organisms and their environment or as narrowing and constraining what they can do. Discuss whether there is a conflict between these interpretations. 39 問題與討論 [email protected] Ayo 台南站 http://mail.nutn.edu.tw/~hycheng/ 國立臺南大學 環境與生態學院 Ayo 院長的個人網站