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Adaptation and levels of selection • What is an adaptation? • What is natural selection? • On what does selection act?
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Adaptation and levels of selection

Feb 22, 2016

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Adaptation and levels of selection. What is an adaptation? What is natural selection? On what does selection act?. What is an adaptation?. A feature designed to improve survival and/or reproduction of an organism (or other entity) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Adaptation and levels of selection

Adaptation and levels of selection

• What is an adaptation?• What is natural selection?• On what does selection act?

Page 2: Adaptation and levels of selection

What is an adaptation?

• A feature designed to improve survival and/or reproduction of an organism (or other entity)

• Most behavior is likely to be adaptive because it influences how an animal acquires mates, finds food and avoids predators

Page 3: Adaptation and levels of selection

How do adaptations evolve (or what does evolution by natural

selection require)?

• Variation• Differential reproduction or survival• Transmission to the next generation

(heredity)

Page 4: Adaptation and levels of selection

Evolution by natural selection

Page 5: Adaptation and levels of selection

Evolution by natural selection

Page 6: Adaptation and levels of selection

Evolution by natural selection

Page 7: Adaptation and levels of selection

Evolution by natural selection

Page 8: Adaptation and levels of selection

Selection and Galapagos finches

14 species evolved in about 500,000 years

Page 9: Adaptation and levels of selection

Selection on beak depth in G. fortis

4% change in two years, due to change in seed sizes

Page 10: Adaptation and levels of selection

Selection on G. fortis

Trait Selection h2*

Bill length 0.45 s.d.u. 0.66Bill depth 0.58 s.d.u. 0.69Tarsus length 0.27 s.d.u. 0.82

*h2 estimated from midparent-offspring regression

Page 11: Adaptation and levels of selection

Measuring selection• Directional selection

– Extreme trait has highest fitness, i.e. lifetime reproductive success (LRS)

– S = cov (trait,fitness)– Cov(x,w) = (xi-X)(wi-W)/n

• Stabilizing selection – Intermediate trait has highest LRS – S = cov (trait2,fitness)

• Disruptive selection– High and low traits have highest LRS– S = cov (trait2,fitness)

Trait value

Life

time

repr

oduc

tive

succ

ess

Page 12: Adaptation and levels of selection

Stabilizing selection on song repertoires

Page 13: Adaptation and levels of selection

Disruptive selection for body size in male bluegill sunfish

Three male morphs: sneaker, female mimic, territorial.

males

female

Page 14: Adaptation and levels of selection

On what does selection act?

• Organism• Population (group)• Kin group• Cytoplasmic elements• Cells• Genes

Page 15: Adaptation and levels of selection

What is an organism?

• An organism contains one or more closely related (usually genetically identical) cells descended from a single progenitor cell

• Has a repeating life-cycle• Either consists of, contains, or works for the

welfare of germ-line cells

Page 16: Adaptation and levels of selection

Why do adaptations typically benefit an individual organism?

• Because individuals inherit characteristics due to genetic transmission. Traits are typically heritable by individuals not by groups.

• Genes replicate and change in frequency after selection on individuals. Individuals replicate faster than groups.

Page 17: Adaptation and levels of selection

Group

• Theoretically possible if groups differ in survival or reproduction

• But, unlikely to be caused by differential extinction because individuals die faster than groups.

• Possible if groups exhibit differential productivity. Experimentally demonstrated in flour beetles due to changes in cannibalism

Page 18: Adaptation and levels of selection

The fallacy of group selection

Page 19: Adaptation and levels of selection

Honeybees as superorganisms

Social insects are often composed of closely related individuals

Page 20: Adaptation and levels of selection

Kin• Selection can favor altruistic behavior when

animals interact with kin because they share copies of genes that are identical by descent.

• The condition for altruism to spread is given by Hamilton’s rule: rB > C – B = increase in recipient’s LRS– C = decrease in donor’s LRS– r = genetic relatedness

Page 21: Adaptation and levels of selection

Relatedness

• Probability that the alleles at a locus are identical by descent in two individuals

• For diploids, r can be calculated by raising 1/2 to a power equal to the number of links in a pedigree separating two relatives and then summing independent paths involving each common ancestor

Page 22: Adaptation and levels of selection

Estimating relatedness

a b

1 2

Ancestor b: (1/2)(1/2) = 1/4r12 = 1/4 + 1/4 = 1/2

Full sibs (diploid)

1/2

Ancestor a: (1/2)(1/2) = 1/4

Page 23: Adaptation and levels of selection

Estimating relatedness

a b

2

Ancestor b: (1/2)4 = 1/16 1/16 + 1/16 = 1/8

1

Cousins (diploid)

r12 =

Ancestor a: (1/2)4= 1/16

Page 24: Adaptation and levels of selection

Kin selection in lions

Page 25: Adaptation and levels of selection

Females nurse their sister’s cubs

Page 26: Adaptation and levels of selection

Males help brothers in coalitions

Inclusive fitness:

IFi = wi + rijwj

wi = offspring producedby individual i