* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download One - Dr Debra Anderson
The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup
Sexual selection wikipedia , lookup
Evidence of common descent wikipedia , lookup
Sociobiology wikipedia , lookup
Evolving digital ecological networks wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary mismatch wikipedia , lookup
Evolutionary history of life wikipedia , lookup
Hologenome theory of evolution wikipedia , lookup
Theistic evolution wikipedia , lookup
Microbial cooperation wikipedia , lookup
Inclusive fitness wikipedia , lookup
Natural selection wikipedia , lookup
Saltation (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Genetic drift wikipedia , lookup
WHAT IS LIFE? Chapter 1 All living things exhibit five characteristics in combination. A. Characteristics of Life 1. Organization • • • • • • • chemical (atom -> molecule -> macromolecule) organelle cell tissue organ organ system multicellular organism Biological organization beyond individual organisms • Population: two or more members of the same species living in the same place at the same time • Community: Populations of different species in a particular area • Ecosystem: The living and nonliving components of an area • Biosphere: the parts of the planet that can sustain life and the organisms that live there Each level of biological organization exhibits emergent properties. Ex. Capillaries transport blood (property not exhibited by individual endothelial cells). 2. Energy Use & Metabolism Metabolism - biochemical reactions that acquire & use energy. Why do organisms need energy? • to combat entropy (the tendency towards disorder) • • • to build new structures to repair/break down old structures to reproduce How do organisms obtain energy? • By extracting energy from the environment • Producers: get energy from non- living sources • Consumers: get nutrients made by other organisms • Decomposers: get nutrients from dead organisms 3. Maintenance of Homeostasis • Homeostasis - the ability of an organism to maintain its internal environment despite conditions in the external environment. • Failure to maintain homeostasis can have drastic consequences including death Ex. Human body temperature is ~98.6ºF • • if body temperature rises, you sweat. if body temperature lowers, you shiver. 4. Reproduction, Growth & Development Asexual reproduction - involves a single parent; progeny are genetically identical to the parent. • Often used in unicellular organisms Sexual reproduction - involves 2 parents; progeny are genetically diverse. Is it essential for an individual to reproduce? Not necessarily . . . • The population needs to be maintained Organisms that successfully reproduce over several generations compose a species • 5. Irritability & Adaptation Irritability - immediate response to a stimulus. Adaptation - an inherited behavior or characteristic that enables an organism to survive & reproduce. Over time, adaptations are modified by natural selection. Natural Selection - the enhanced survival & reproductive success of individuals whose inherited traits better adapt them to a particular environment. Evolution • Genetic change within a population Natural selection is one of the driving forces • Mutations in DNA provide genetic variation upon which natural selection acts • • An ongoing process B. Biodiversity Life on earth is diverse, yet similar. Taxonomists place organisms into groups based upon evolutionary relationships. Broadest, most inclusive group (taxon) is the domain. Domain Kingdom Phylum or Division Class Order Family Genus Species Genus & species refer to the organism’s binomial (name). The Three Domains: • Bacteria - unicellular prokaryotes • Archaea - unicellular prokaryotes • Eukarya - eukaryotes • • • • Kingdom Protista Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Animalia Human classification scheme: Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus & species Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primates Hominidae Homo sapiens C. The Study of Life Scientists study life by using the scientific method. What is difference between hypothesis, theory & law? • • • Hypothesis - “an educated guess”; a tentative explanation of phenomena which is experimentally tested. Theory - a widely accepted explanation of natural phenomena; has stood up to thorough & continual testing. Law - a statement of what always occurs under certain conditions. Validity can be influenced by: • • • Sample size The appropriate use of controls • A control group is treated like the experimental group except for the one variable being tested • Placebos are a form of control Use of double blind studies THE EVOLUTION OF EVOLUTIONARY THOUGHT Chapter 15 Biological evolution - genetic change in a population over time. • Macroevolution - large scale evolutionary changes [speciation, extinction] that occur over relatively long periods of time. • Microevolution - changes in individual allele frequencies within a population that occur over relatively short periods of time. Often, accumulating microevolutionary changes lead to macroevolutionary changes. A. Pre-Darwinian Views 1. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) & others • • Species are fixed & unchanging. Earth is relatively young (only a few thousand years old). Species could not become extinct. 2. Georges Buffon (1707-1788) • Individuals within a species change. • The earth is very old. • 3. James Hutton (1726-1797) Forces that formed the earth acted in a gradual, yet uniform, way. [uniformitarianism] 4. Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) • Fossils represent extinctions. • • Older, simpler fossils appeared in the lower layers of rock. [superposition] 5. Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744- 1829) • Strong advocate of evolution. • Proposed that species evolve from existing species as a result of interactions with their environment. • Mechanism for evolution – “progeny inherit acquired characteristics from parents”. 6. Charles Lyell (1797-1875) • Renewed idea of uniformitarianism. B. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) Received degree in Theology (1831); embarked on a 5-year voyage (18311836) as a naturalist aboard the HMS Beagle. Throughout his voyage, Darwin developed his theory of evolution on basis of: • observations during the voyage • ideas of Hutton, Cuvier, Buffon, Lamarck, Lyell & Malthus Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection in 1859 - 22 years after his voyage! Almost scooped by Alfred Russell Wallace in 1858. Darwin’s main ideas: • Populations include individuals that vary for inherited traits. • More individuals are born than survive to reproduce. • Individuals compete with each other for limited resources. • • Within populations, the characteristics of some individuals make them more able to survive a particular environmental challenge. The mechanism of evolution is natural selection. Natural selection is the differential survival & reproduction of organisms whose genetic traits better adapt them to a particular environment. • • The direction of natural selection can change. Natural selection does not lead to perfection. Sexual selection is a form of natural selection that directly affects traits that increase an individual’s chance of reproducing. Evolution by means of natural selection explains both the unity & diversity of life on earth. • Shared ancestry (descent from a common ancestor) explains similarities among species. • Natural selection accounts for much of the diversity. C. Evolution Today - Epidemiology Biological evolution is a continual and ongoing process. 1. Emerging Infectious Diseases • resurgence of some diseases • appearance of “new” diseases (toxic (measles, cholera, diphtheria & tuberculosis) shock syndrome, Legionnaires’ disease, AIDS & Ebola) 2. Rise of Antibiotic Resistance Resistant bacteria appeared just 4 years after the medical community started prescribing antibiotics. Antibiotics kill susceptible bacteria, but leave behind those that can resist it - creating a situation where they can flourish. • This is a case of artificial selection Today, some laboratory strains of Staphylococcus are resistant to ALL known antibiotics. THE FORCES OF EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE MICROEVOLUTION Chapter 16 Evolution occurs at the population level as allele frequencies change. A. Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium A theoretical state in which allele frequencies of a population do not change from one generation to the next. H-W equilibrium is only possible if: • • • mating population is large mating is entirely random there is NO migration, mutation, or natural selection Hardy-Weinberg Equation p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 p2 = frequency of homozygous dominant individuals 2pq = frequency of heterozygotes q2 = frequency of homozygous recessive individuals p = frequency of dominant allele q = frequency of recessive allele NOTE: p + q = 1 H-W example #1: In a certain population, 36% have sickle cell anemia. What is the frequency of the dominant allele? What do we know? (p2, 2pq, q2, p or q) q2 = 36% or 0.36 What do we want to find? p Calculations: q2 = q 0.36 = 0.6 q = 0.6 p+q=1 Thus, p = 1 - 0.6 or 0.4 H-W example #2: In a certain population, the frequency of the dominant allele is 0.7. What is the frequency of heterozygous individuals? What do we know? (p2, 2pq, q2, p or q) p = 0.7 What do we want to find? 2pq Calculations: p+q=1 Thus, q = 1 - 0.7 or 0.3 2pq = 2 x 0.7 x 0.3 or 0.42 From the previous example we know: p = 0.7 q = 0.3 2pq = 0.42 Calculate the frequency of homozygous dominant individuals. 0.49 Calculate the frequency of homozygous recessive individuals. 0.09 If there are 1000 individuals in this population, how many are: • heterozygous? 420 • • homozygous dominant? 490 homozygous recessive? 90 H-W equilibrium provides a background against which microevolution can be detected. • • If allele & genotype frequencies change from one generation to the next, then evolution is occurring with respect to that particular gene. If frequencies remain unchanged, then evolution is not occurring. B. Factors That Cause Microevolution in Natural Populations 1. Nonrandom Mating Nonrandom mating causes certain alleles to become more common in future generations (some individuals leave more offspring than others). Ex. Albinism among Arizona’s Hopi Indians 2. Migration Individuals migrate between populations. • Immigrating individuals introduce new alleles and migrating individuals remove alleles. Gene flow is the movement of alleles between populations Ex. New York City’s waves of immigration • 3. Genetic Drift A change in the gene pool of a small population due to chance. Genetic drift in human populations may be caused by the founder effect or a population bottleneck. • Founder effect – genetic drift due to a few individuals leaving a large population to found a new group. • Unlikely that gene pool of founding population is representative of original population. Ex. Ellis-van Creveld syndrome among Pennsylvania Amish. • Population bottleneck – genetic drift due to high mortality in a population. • Unlikely that gene pool of the remaining population is representative of original population. Ex. Pingelapese blindness among Pingelapese people of the eastern Caroline islands. Decreased genetic diversity among Cheetahs. 4. Mutation A change in the DNA - introduces ‘new’ alleles into the population. Mutations can be beneficial, “silent”, or harmful. 5. Natural Selection The differential survival and reproduction of organisms whose genetic traits better adapt them to a particular environment. Considered to be the major driving force of evolution. Types of Natural Selection • Directional Selection Environment selects against one phenotypic extreme, allowing the other to become more prevalent. • Disruptive Selection Environment selects against intermediate phenotype, allowing both extremes to become more prevalent. • Stabilizing Selection Environment selects against two extreme phenotypes, allowing the intermediates to become more prevalent. Balanced Polymorphism A form of stabilizing selection that maintains deleterious recessive alleles in a population because heterozygotes resist an infectious disease. • Sickle cell anemia is maintained because heterozygotes are resistant to malaria. • Cystic fibrosis is maintained because heterozygotes are resistant to cholera & typhoid fever. COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS Chapter 44 Ecosystem All the biotic (living) and abiotic (nonliving) components in a defined area. • Ecosystems interact. • All ecosystems require a constant input of energy. • Chemicals are cycled within ecosystems. 1. Energy Flow Energy flows in one direction through an ecosystem. Route of energy flow is determined by an ecosystem’s trophic structure. animals that eat carnivores animals that eat herbivores animals that eat producers photo- or chemoautotrophs The Antarctic Food webweb - several of life species function at more Food web – several thanspecies one trophic level. function at more than one trophic level. Is all of the energy stored by individuals at one trophic level available to the next? No - energy needs of individual, second law of thermodynamics. On average, ~10% (2-30%) is transferred. Energy transfer in Cayuga Lake: humans store 1.5 kcal smelt fish store 15 kcal aquatic herbivores store 150 kcal algae store 1,500 kcal Food chains rarely extend beyond 4 trophic levels. Other types of pyramids can be used to describe ecosystems. • pyramid of numbers - shows number of organisms at each trophic level. • pyramid of biomass - shows total weight of organisms at each trophic level.