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Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation
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Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Chapter 12Human Variation and Adaptation

Page 2: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

•How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

•Are observable characteristics (i.e. skin color and color of eyes) as important as the fundamental differences among humans that are defined by evolutionary processes?

Page 3: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Historical Views of Human Variation•Biological determinism - cultural and

biological variations are inherited in the same way.

•Eugenics - "race improvement" through forced sterilization of members of some groups and encouraged reproduction among others.

Page 4: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Traditional Concept of Race

•Since the 1600s, race has been used to refer to culturally defined groups.

•Race is used as a biological term, but has enormous social significance.

•In any racial group, there will be individuals who fall into the normal range of variation for another group for one or several characteristics.▫Polytypic species

Page 5: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Intelligence

•Genetic and environmental factors contribute to intelligence.

•IQ scores change during a person’s lifetime

•Cognitive abilities are polygenic -- measured by many genes

•Nature and Nurture!

Page 6: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Human Polymorphisms

•Genetic traits with different phenotypic expressions▫A cline is a gradual change in the

frequency of a trait or allele in populations dispersed over geographical space.

▫Clinal distributions are thought to reflect natural selection and/or gene flow.

Page 7: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Polymorphisms at the DNA Level•Scattered through the human genome are

microsatellites, sites where DNA segments are repeated.

•Each person has a unique arrangement that defines their distinctive “DNA fingerprint.”

Page 8: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Human Biocultural Evolution

•Humans live in cultural environments that are continually modified by their activities.

•Evolutionary processes can be understood only within this cultural context.

•Lactose intolerance…

Page 9: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Lactose Intolerance•In all human populations, infants and

young children are able to digest milk.•In most mammals, including humans, the

gene that codes for lactase production “switches off” in adolescence.

•The geographical distribution of lactose tolerance is related to a history of cultural dependence on fresh milk products.

Page 10: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Frequencies of Lactose Intolerance

Population Group Percent

U.S. whites 2–19

Finnish 48

Swiss 12

Swedish 4

Page 11: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Frequencies ofLactose Intolerance

Population Group Percent

U.S. blacks 70–77

Ibos 99

Bantu 90

Fulani 22

Thais 99

Asian Americans 95–100

Native Americans 85

Page 12: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Population Genetics

•The study of the frequency of alleles, genotypes, and phenotypes in populations from a microevolutionary perspective.

•A gene pool is the total complement of genes shared by the reproductive members of a population.

•Breeding isolates are populations that are isolated geographically and/or socially from other breeding groups.

Page 13: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium• The mathematical relationship expressing the

predicted distribution of alleles in populations; the central theorem of population genetics.

• Provides a tool to establish whether allele frequencies in a human population are changing.1. New variation (i.e., mutation)2. Redistributed variation (i.e., gene flow or

genetic drift)3. Selection of “advantageous” allele

combinations that promote reproductive success (i.e., natural selection).

Page 14: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Adaptive Significance of Human Variation• Human variation is the result of

adaptations to environmental conditions. Acclimatization

• Physiological response to the environment operates at two levels:1.Long-term evolutionary changes

characterize all individuals within a population or species.

2.Short-term, temporary physiological response is called acclimatization.

Page 15: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Skin Color

Page 16: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Ultraviolet Rays

•Ultraviolet Rays penetrate the skin and can eventually damage DNA within skin cells. ▫The three major

types of cells that can be affected are squamous cells, basal cells, and melanocytes.

Page 17: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

UV Radiation

•Early hominids lived in the tropics, where solar radiation is more intense than in temperate areas to the north and south.

•Unlike modern city dwellers, early hominids spent their days outdoors.

•Early hominids didn’t wear clothing that would have protected them from the sun.

•Since this is how we evolved, when don’t get enough sun, we may develop…

Page 18: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Rickets

• Insufficient amounts of vitamin D during childhood result in rickets, a condition that often leads to bowing of the long bones of the legs and deformation of the pelvis.

Page 19: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Thermal Environment

•Mammals and birds have evolved complex physiological mechanisms to maintain a constant body temperature.

•Humans are found in a wide variety of thermal environments, ranging from 120° F to -60° F.▫This is due to both Culture….and Biology!

▫Biology part (next slide)

Page 20: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Human Response to Heat

•Long-term adaptations to heat evolved in our ancestors:▫Sweat Glands▫Vasodilation – capillaries near skin’s surface

widen

Page 21: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Human Response to Cold

•Short-term responses to cold: ▫Metabolic rate and shivering▫Vasoconstriction – to reduce blood

flow to the skin

Page 22: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

High Altitude•Multiple factors produce stress on the

human body at higher altitudes:▫Hypoxia (reduced available oxygen)▫Intense solar radiation▫Cold▫Low humidity▫Wind (which amplifies cold stress)

▫Bergmann’s and Allen’s rules...

Page 23: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Bergmann’s Rule• Body size tends to be

greater in populations that live in cold environments.▫ As mass increases, the

relative amount of surface area decreases proportionately.

▫ Because heat is lost at the surface, it follows that increased mass allows for greater heat retention and reduced heat loss.

Page 24: Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation. How do you define “race” and do you think it’s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species?

Allen’s Rule• In colder climates,

shorter appendages, with increased mass-to-surface ratios, are adaptive because they are more effective at preventing heat loss.

• Conversely, longer appendages, with increased surface area relative to mass, are more adaptive in warmer climates because they promote heat loss.