Top Banner
CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY
25

CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Dec 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Maria Morton
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

CHAPTER 2

EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY

Page 2: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle

The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection

30 years of studyHMS BeagleGalapagos Islands

Page 3: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.2 Darwin’s Evidence

Principles of Geology, by Charles Lyellfossil recordliving animal similaritiesembryologynonfunctional partsplants from cabbage

Page 4: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

See Table 2.1

Fossils

Geographical Distribution

Oceanic Islands

Page 5: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.3 Inventing the Theory of Natural Selection

Darwin and Malthus population size stays constant

Natural Selection Individuals that possess superior physical,

behavioral, or other attributes are more likely to survive than those not so well endowed.

Ex. Breeding domestic animals (pigeons)

Page 6: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Inventing the Theory

Darwin drafts his argument but waits 16 years to publish it.

Wallace has the same idea.Publication of Darwin’s Theory

The Descent of Man

Page 7: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.4 The Beaks of Darwin’s Finches

See Figure 2.11The importance of the beak.Was Darwin wrong?A Closer Look

See Figure 2.13 The Measurement of beaks in Geospiza fortis.

Darwin was right after all.

Page 8: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.5 Clusters of Species

Adaptive radiation 1. Ground finches 2. Tree finches 3. Warbler finch 4. Vegetarian finch

See Figure 2.14

Page 9: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.6 Hawaiian Drosophila

Unique morphological and behavioral traitsScaptomyza and DrosophilaLarvae have specialized niches. Adaptive radiation

Page 10: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.7 Lake Victoria Chichlid Fishes

Recent radiationChichlid diversityAbrupt extinction

Page 11: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.8 New Zealand Alpine Buttercups

Adaptive radiation by periodic isolationRananculus species have invaded five

habitats, receded to isolate mountain habitats, and reformed links again.

See Figure 2.18

Page 12: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.9 What is Ecology?

The study of how the organisms that live in a place interact with their physical world.

Levels of Ecological Organization Populations Communities Ecosystems Biomes

Population, community, or systems ecologists

Page 13: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.10 Ecosystems

ENERGY FLOWS THROUGH ECOSYSTEMS

FOOD CHAINS SOLAR ENERGY PRODUCERS CONSUMERS (herbivores, carnivores) DECOMPOSERS

Page 14: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Materials Cycle Within Ecosystems

Minerals are recycled from organism to organism.

Page 15: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Major Ecosystems = Biomes

Rainfall and temperature are important factors.

Draw food chains for different biomes. See Fig. 2.20

Page 16: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

POPULATIONS AND HOW THEY GROW

Page 17: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.11 Patterns of Population Growth

Innate capacity for increase or biotic potential

Realized rate of population increaseImmigrants Emigrantsr = (birth = immigration)- (death +

emigration)

Page 18: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Exponential Growth

Population growth rate = rNr = rate of population increaseN = number of individualsNotice the J-shaped curve

Page 19: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Carrying Capacity

List factors needed by a populationpopulation growth rate = rN (K - N) Krate x number of population x carrying

capacityRead sectionSigmoid growth curve

Page 20: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Life History Strategies

R = exponential growthK = slow population growthMosquitoes reproduce fast = r-selected life

history and J curveElephants reproduce slowly = a K-selected

life history and a slow incline

Page 21: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.11 Population growth is limited by the ability of the environment to support the population. Organisms in transient environments are often adapted to reproduce rapidly, while those in stable environments tend to reproduce more slowly.

Page 22: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

2.12 Human Populations

Humans have K-selected lifestyles.A stable population is now doubling

rapidly.See Figure 2.25

Page 23: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

The Advent of Exponential Human Population Growth

The population may double in forty years.

Page 24: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

Population Pyramids

See Figure 2.26 - Mexico’s populationSee Figure 2.27 - Population pyramidsCompare developed countries to

underdeveloped countriesLook at Table 2.2

Page 25: CHAPTER 2 EVOLUTION AND ECOLOGY. 2.1 Darwin’s Voyage on HMS Beagle §The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection §30 years of study §HMS Beagle.

An Uncertain Future

Population growth is a challenge to the earth.There will be an uneven population growth

rate among countries. See Fig. 2.28The wealth gap becomes larger.Developed countries use too many resources.Birth and death rates have changed.