Top Banner
Animal Populations Quagga Cockroach
102

ERMslides1

Nov 11, 2014

Download

Education

Class presentation slides for ERM 150 (first quarter) for Spring Semester 2009
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: ERMslides1

Animal Populations

Quagga Cockroach

Page 2: ERMslides1

Population Factors

Distribution/RangeNicheHabitat ToleranceResource Availability

Reproductive rate

Biotic Potential: MaturityMortality

Page 3: ERMslides1

Distribution

Migration

Motility

Broadcasting

Page 4: ERMslides1

Niche

Predator/Prey

Host/Parasite

Mutualistic

Page 5: ERMslides1

Predator Prey

Page 6: ERMslides1

Host Parasite

Demodex mite: Human eyelid

Page 7: ERMslides1

Host Parasite

Demodex mite: Human eyelid

Page 8: ERMslides1

Mutualism

E. Coli : Human intestines

Page 9: ERMslides1

Mutualism

E. Coli : Human intestines

Page 10: ERMslides1

Habitat Tolerance

Mexican Burrowing Toad

Page 11: ERMslides1

Resource AccessCompetitive exclusion

Resource partitioning

Page 12: ERMslides1

Reproductive Rate

Page 13: ERMslides1

Maturity

Page 14: ERMslides1

Mortality

Page 15: ERMslides1

Environmental Resistance

J curve S curve

Page 16: ERMslides1

Environmental Resistance

J curve S curve

Page 17: ERMslides1

Strategies

K-selected EquilibriumLarger, few offspring

R-selectedOpportunist

smaller, short-lived

Page 18: ERMslides1

Human Population

Page 19: ERMslides1

Human Population

Thomas Malthus(1766 - 1834)

Page 20: ERMslides1

Demographics

Growth Rate = Birth Rate - Death rate

69 years

Doubling time = growth rate

Page 21: ERMslides1

Current World Population

http://www.ibiblio.org/lunarbin/worldpop

http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/summaries.html

Page 22: ERMslides1

21st century projection

Page 23: ERMslides1

Population Distribution

Page 24: ERMslides1

Population Profiles

Page 25: ERMslides1

US birth rates

Page 26: ERMslides1

Since 1800

Decrease in death rateVaccines, antibiotics, sanitation

Diagnosis and treatment

Lifestyle choicesdiet, exercise, nutrition

Child Mortality rates

Page 27: ERMslides1

What is Human?

Page 28: ERMslides1

What is Human?

Opposable Thumbspower, precision grip

Bipedalism

Color, 3-D vision

Language and abstract thought

Page 29: ERMslides1

Phylogenetics

Page 30: ERMslides1

African homeland

Page 31: ERMslides1

Timelines

Page 32: ERMslides1

“Lucy”

Australopithecus afarensis

Page 33: ERMslides1

Skull Comparison

Page 34: ERMslides1

Cranial Volume

Page 35: ERMslides1

Homo Neanderthalsis

Page 36: ERMslides1

Speech?

Page 37: ERMslides1

Neanderthal extinction

Climate, resources

Epidemics

“Culture Gap”

Hybridization

Page 38: ERMslides1

Hybrids?

Page 39: ERMslides1

Homo floresiensis

Page 40: ERMslides1

Sources of evidence

Geological

Archaeological

Biological

Page 41: ERMslides1

Carbon Isotopes

12C 13C 14C

6 protons6 neutrons

6 protons7 neutrons

6 protons8 neutrons

STABLE STABLE RADIOACTIVE

Page 42: ERMslides1

Half Life

Half life (14C) = 5730 years

Page 43: ERMslides1

Shroud of Turin

Page 44: ERMslides1

Ice Man (Otzi)

Page 45: ERMslides1

Ice Man (Otzi)

Page 46: ERMslides1

Technology

Page 47: ERMslides1

Great Leap Forward

40,000 - 50,000 years ago

Climate

Tool construction

Language

Page 48: ERMslides1

Biological evidence

Hemoglobin

Page 49: ERMslides1

Sickle Cell anemia

Page 50: ERMslides1

Lactose Tolerance

Page 51: ERMslides1

Lactose Tolerance

Page 52: ERMslides1

DNA

Page 53: ERMslides1

Chromosomes

Page 54: ERMslides1

Genetic Fingerprinting

Page 55: ERMslides1

Y haplogroups

Page 56: ERMslides1

Y haplogroup distribution

Page 57: ERMslides1

Mitochondrial DNA

Page 58: ERMslides1

mtDNA haplogroups

Page 59: ERMslides1

Exodus

Page 60: ERMslides1

Mitochondrial Eve

Page 61: ERMslides1

Mutations

Ellis-vanCreveld

Page 62: ERMslides1

Blood Groups

Page 63: ERMslides1

Blood Type Distribution

Page 64: ERMslides1

CCR5-∆-32

Plague survivors

HIV resistance

Page 65: ERMslides1

Human migration

Page 66: ERMslides1

Fertile Crescent

Page 67: ERMslides1

Agricultural centers

Page 68: ERMslides1

Agricultural centers

Access to fresh water

Temperate climate

Domesticable flora & fauna

Page 69: ERMslides1

Domestication

Dominance hierarchy (herds)

Non-territorial

Non-carnivorous, not aggressive

Easy breeding in captivity

Page 70: ERMslides1

Domesticable Plants

Edible, non-toxic

Annual, high yield

Seed broadcasting

Use as material

Page 71: ERMslides1

Setbacks

Droughts, Floods

Competition

Sanitation

Page 72: ERMslides1

Farming advantages

Birth intervals

Labor assistance

Page 73: ERMslides1

Lifestyle changes

Hunter/gatherer farmer

Page 74: ERMslides1

Deadly Gifts

measles rinderpest

Page 75: ERMslides1

Species jumps

Measles Rinderpest

Smallpox Pox virus

Bird influenza influenza

FPLV Canine parvovirus

Distemper (dogs) Distemper (seals)

Page 76: ERMslides1

Dawn of Disease

Increased contact time

Animal labor

Sanitation issues

Page 77: ERMslides1

Pathogens

Girolamo Fracastro “seeds too small to be seen”

Pasteurspontaneous generation

Kochmicroorganism <-> disease

Page 78: ERMslides1

Pathogenic classes

Virus

Bacteria

Prion

Page 79: ERMslides1

Viruses

Non-livingDNA or RNA surrounded by protein

Need host cell to propagate

Page 80: ERMslides1

Viral Replication

Page 81: ERMslides1

Viruses

Flu

Rabies

HIV

Page 82: ERMslides1

Bacteria

Cellular organism

Characterized by size/shape

Aerobic or anaerobic

Cell division

Page 83: ERMslides1

Eukaryotic cell

Page 84: ERMslides1

Bacterial vs. viral size

Page 85: ERMslides1

Bacterial shapes

Page 86: ERMslides1

Mitosis

Page 87: ERMslides1

Bacteria

Bubonic plague

Legionnaires disease

Heliobacter pylori

Page 88: ERMslides1

Prion(proteinaceous infectious particle)

Only protein

Must be consumed

Long incubation period

Page 89: ERMslides1

Prion

Page 90: ERMslides1

Mad cow disease

Page 91: ERMslides1

Scrapie

Page 92: ERMslides1

Progress of Disease

exposure incubation recovery

Page 93: ERMslides1

Defense

1. Barrier

2. Inflammation

3. Memory

Page 94: ERMslides1

Barrier Defense

Skin

Gastrointestinal Tract

Respiratory system

Page 95: ERMslides1

Inflammation Response

Redness, swelling

Fever

Fatigue, weakness

Histamine release

Page 96: ERMslides1

Memory (Immune system)

Antigen --- Antibody

Page 97: ERMslides1

Phagocytosis

Page 98: ERMslides1

Memory (Immune system)

LymphocytesB cells: must be activated

recognize and bind antigen

antibody - mediated

T cells: cell - mediatedfind, bind, destroy

Page 99: ERMslides1

Lymphatic system

Page 100: ERMslides1

Modern Defenses

Pasteurization, Refrigeration

Vaccinations

Antibiotics, Antiseptics

Page 101: ERMslides1

Active vs. Passive Immunity

ActiveVaccines (disabled or killed

viruses)Life - long immunity

Passive: Immunoglobulins (Ig’s)short term

Page 102: ERMslides1

Autoimmune Diseases

Allergies

Asthma

Lupus Erythematosis

Rheumatoid Arthritis