1 / 36

Chapter 5: Evolution, Biodiversity & Population Ecology

Chapter 5: Evolution, Biodiversity & Population Ecology. www.aw-bc.com/Withgott. Evolution. genetic change in populations of organisms across generations. modifications appearance :. www.aw-bc.com/Withgott. Evolution. functioning : beaks in honeycreepers. www.aw-bc.com/Withgott.

Download Presentation

Chapter 5: Evolution, Biodiversity & Population Ecology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5: Evolution, Biodiversity & Population Ecology www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  2. Evolution • genetic change in populations of organisms across generations. • modifications • appearance: www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  3. Evolution • functioning: beaks in honeycreepers www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  4. Natural Selection • explains the great variety of living organisms. • derives from several premises noticed in nature

  5. Natural Selection Premises • constant struggle of organisms to survive and mate • organisms tend to produce more offspring that can survive. • individuals of the same species are not identical • variation

  6. Variation • genetical differences • environment within which genes are expressed • interaction between genes and environment • Adaptation: trait that promotes success of a species

  7. Effects of Natural Selection on Genetic Variation • Mutations: accidental changes in the nucleotide sequence of the DNA • addition • deletion • substitution

  8. Sexual Reproduction also Generates Variation • recombination of genes produces a novel combination generating variation • directional selection • stabilizing selection • disruptive selection

  9. Directional selection • selection that drives a feature in one direction www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  10. Stabilizing selection • preserves status quo, no changes www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  11. Disruptive Selection • traits diverge into two or more directions www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  12. Evidence of Natural Selection • Selective breeding • breeding of domesticated animals and plants • dog and cat breeds • variations of Brassica oleracea • artificial selection

  13. Biodiversity • Total of all organisms in the area • diversity of species • gene pool • populations • communities • Evolution generates biological diversity • as of 2008 1:3 amphibians, 1:7 birds and 1:5 mammals is considered endangered or threaten (National Geographic) • Species: organism that is able to reproduce and have viable offspring

  14. Speciation: Allopatric & Sympatric • Allopatric: species form due to physical separation • mutations can occur independently • members of different populations don't mate • populations continue diverging through time • single species can generate multiple species through time

  15. Separation of Populations • glacial ice sheets during ice ages • change of course of major rivers • rise of mountain ranges • evaporation of major lakes into smaller bodies of water • temperature variation causing migration of plant populations creating new patterns of animal/plant distribution • isolation must remain for thousands of generations • reunion of populations may occur, but if they are not able to interbreed, two or more new species have emerged.

  16. Sympatric • reproductively isolated due to behavioral causes • feeding at different times of the day • feed at different sites • mating on different times of the year • hybridization in some plants • mutations causing change in number of chromosomes

  17. Diversification • as a result of numerous speciation events • phylogenetic trees explain differences and similarities between species • Speciation and extinction • natural process that takes 1-10 million years

  18. Diversification www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  19. Species Vulnerable to Extinction • some species may be more vulnerable than others due to change in environmental conditions • climate change • rise and fall of sea level • arrival of harmful species • extreme weather events (drought, flood, etc.) • Endemic: single small population present only in a particular type of environment: Attwater chicken

  20. Attwater Chicken • 1 million individuals in 1900 • 50 or so individuals today • habitat disruption • oil industry, housing, cattle, rice fields • predators (snake, rat, skunk) • diseases • weather • collision (fence, cars) • fire ants (kill chicks)

  21. Levels of Ecological Organization • Species • Population • Communities • Ecosystems • Biosphere

  22. www.aw-bc.com/Withgott • Ecological Organization

  23. Habitat, Niche and Specialization • Habitat: living and non-living elements around a species • thriving of a species depends on patterns of habitat use • each species' habitat is scale dependent • habitat selection is possible if the species is mobile • the survival of the species depends if the habitat is suitable or not

  24. Niche • a species' niche reflects its use of resources and functional role in the ecosystem • "job" • specialists and generalists • Prairie dog • eats grasses and keeps grass low for predator control • more grass grown around burrow because • airiates soil by digging • soil becomes richer near burrows because of dung • burrow houses other animals when empty (snakes, rabbits, owls)

  25. Population Ecology • Population size: number of individuals present at a given time • Attwater chicken- 1 million to 50 individuals • Population density: number of individuals per population per unit area • golden toad- large population in a small area • Population distribution: spatial arrangement of organisms within an area. There are 3 types.

  26. Population Distribution: Random www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  27. Uniform www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  28. Clumped www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  29. Population Ecology • sex ratio: depends on the behavior (monogamous or polygamous) of the species, type of reproduction (autofecundates or different sexes) • age structure: age structure diagrams www.aw-bc.com/Withgott

  30. Population Ecology • birth and death rates: survivorship curves • type I: higher mortality at older age • type II: equal rate of death at any age • type III: higher rate of death at younger age www.aw-bc.com/Withgott k-selected r-selected

  31. Population Ecology • Immigration • emigration • growth rate • Unregulated population increase: shows exponential growth=J curve • carrying capacity causes logistic growth curve (S curve) to show • caused by an environmental resistance (water, food, shelter, predators, disease)

  32. Density-dependent factors • its influence is affected by the population density • competition • food • shelter • mate • water • s-shaped curve

  33. Density-independent factors • influence is not affected by population density; can eliminate large numbers of individuals without regard to its density • extreme temperatures • catastrophic climate events • fires • volcano eruptions

  34. Biotic Potential vs Reproductive Strategy • k-selected (k stands for Carrying capacity) • low biotic potential • long gestation period • protects offspring as an investment for species survivor • relative few offspring during lifetime • type 1 curve • eg: humans, whale, rhino, elephant

  35. r-selected (r stands for rate) • focus on quantity not quality • high biotic potential • large number of offspring • survivor of offspring depends on chance • type 3 curve • eg. fish, frogs, snails

  36. Conservation of Biodiversity • social and economic factors • human behavior towards environment • economy vs environmental protection • protection of environment • began without much government support • even today governments may not have the funds • ecotourism is the key THE END

More Related