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Biology 265 EVOLUTION

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Title: Biology 265 EVOLUTION


1
Biology 265EVOLUTION
  • Lecture 7

2
Overview
  • Evolution and adaptation
  • Adaptation or design?
  • Natural selection is the only scientific
    explanation for adaptation
  • Complex organs (e.g. the eye)
  • Imperfections and constraints

3
The Importance of Variation
  • Random, heritable variation drives evolution
  • Neutral variation is subject to stochastic forces
    such as drift
  • Deleterious mutations are eradicated by natural
    selection
  • Advantageous mutations are favored by natural
    selection gt adaptation

4
Environment - Genotype
  • Some variation is due to environmental effects
  • Such variation is not heritable
  • For example, human height has increased due to
    improved nutrition not Darwinian evolution
  • Natural selection only works on inherited
    variation

5
Adaptation
  • Feature of an organism enabling it to survive and
    reproduce in its natural environment better than
    if it lacked the feature

6
William Paley (1743-1805)
  • Natural Theology or, Evidences of the Existence
    and Attributes of the Deity, Collected from the
    Appearances of Nature. (1802)
  • the watch must have had a maker

7
Design and Adaptation
  • Natural theology argued that the perfect design
    of organisms was evidence of a designer (i.e.
    God).
  • The adaptive explanation put forward by Darwin
    needed no designer
  • For Darwin, the watchmaker was blind...

8
In fact, Nature is not very perfect
  • Appendix
  • Wisdom tooth
  • Tough for natural theology as it implied that
    either God was not perfect or deliberately
    created such things

9
Natural Theology A Circular Argument
  • Need to explain the origin of complex entities
    that are highly adapted/designed to fit their
    environment
  • A designer?
  • But the designer must also be a complex entity,
    so the question remains

10
Lamarkian explanations are not much better
  • Escaping predators requires running fast
  • Running a lot strengthens muscles
  • Maybe these stronger muscles are passed on and
    faster runners evolve
  • But why should muscles get stronger with
    exercise?
  • This is an adaptation that requires explanation

11
The only scientific explanation for adaptive
evolution is Darwinian natural selection
12
Evolution of an Eye
  • To suppose that the eye could have been formed
    by natural selection, seems, I freely confess,
    absurd in the highest degree. - Charles Darwin
    (1859) The Origin of Species

13
But Darwin went on to show that
  • The eye could evolve from simple light sensitive
    cells
  • Intermediate stages were useful
  • Rudimentary eyes are common in nature
  • 40-60 independently evolved eyes among
    invertebrates

14
D.-E. Nilsson and S. Pelger, (1994)
  • A Pessimistic Estimate Of The Time Required For
    An Eye To Evolve, Proceedings of the Royal
    Society London B, 256, pp. 53-58.

15
Simulated evolution of an eye
  • Allows shape to change at random but not more
    than 1
  • Each new generation in the computer model was
    derived from the most optically superior eyes
    from the previous generation
  • Lens also evolved from simple transparent cover
  • 2,000 steps (maybe 400,000 generations, 1/2
    million years)

16
Stage 1
  • Simple eye spot
  • Light sensitive cells in skin

17
Stage 2
  • Dimple appears
  • Protects light sensitive cell
  • Provide more visual acuity

18
Stage 3
  • Dimpling increases
  • Dept of pit approximately equals its width
  • Flatworm eye

19
Stage 4
  • The rim constricts
  • Develops an aperture

20
Stage 5
  • Pit fills with jelly
  • Secreted by cells
  • Protects and maintains shape of pit (keeps mud
    out)
  • Nautilus eye

21
Stage 6
  • Transparent layer for protection
  • Thickens
  • Simple lens
  • Transparent materials available - protein in
    human cornea also found elsewhere in body

22
Stage 7
  • Adjustment of lens position
  • Adjustment of aperture

23
Stage 8
  • Lens thickens
  • Refractive index higher in center of lens
  • Possible as lens consists of mixture of proteins
  • Fish eye

24
Historic/Current Functions
  • In the beginning, an organ may have had the same
    function as it does now
  • or it may have had a different function
  • in which case the early stage is considered a
    preadaptation for the later stage

25
Tetrapod limb
  • Two groups of bony fish ray-finned
    (Actinopterygians) and lobe-finned fish
    (Sarcopterygians)
  • Only single main rod of skeletal support in
    lobe-finned fish
  • Used fins to walk on bottom of lakes

26
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27
Preadaptation
  • All tetrapods evolved from lobe-finned fish
  • None evolved from the ray-finned group
  • Lobe-finned skeletal structure was a
    preadaptation for walking on land

28
An imperfect world
  • Organisms are not perfectly adapted to their
    environment
  • If they were, they would live forever, escape all
    predators, lay eggs at an infinite rate etc.
  • Often organisms are not even very close to being
    perfect (e.g. wisdom tooth)

Why?
29
Evolutionary Constraints
  • Time lags
  • Genetic
  • Developmental
  • Historical
  • Trade-offs

30
Time lags
  • Natural selection takes time to catch up with
    environmental changes
  • For example, trees in Central America evolved in
    an environment containing large herbivores like
    the giant ground sloth
  • fruit now appear to be inappropriately
    designed
  • overprotected, excessive production

31
Constraints
  • Time lags
  • Genetic
  • Developmental
  • Historical
  • Trade-offs

32
Genetic constraints
  • Heterozygous advantage
  • Sickle-cell anemia
  • Balanced lethal system in European crested newt,
    Triturus cristatus
  • Two types of chromosome 1 (1A and 1B)
  • Homozygotes die, heterozygotes live
  • Each generation half of offspring die

33
Constraints
  • Time lags
  • Genetic
  • Developmental
  • Historical
  • Trade-offs

34
Developmental constraints
  • A bias on the production of variant phenotypes
    or a limitation on phenotypic variability caused
    by the structure, character, composition, or
    dynamics of the developmental system. (Maynard
    Smith et al. 1985)
  • Pleiotropy - a gene may control more than one
    trait

35
Why not?
  • Why do some forms not occur? E.g. only a subset
    of all possible shell shapes are actually used in
    nature
  • Do organisms have their current form because it
    is the only one possible given the developmental
    constraints?
  • Or is it because natural selection favored that
    form over the others that are now extinct?

36
Testing between selection and constraint
  • Adaptive prediction
  • a theoretical explanation for why some forms
    occur and others do not
  • Measure selection
  • have to make experimentally forms that dont
    occur
  • Measure heritability
  • constraint expects little genetic variation in
    trait

37
Testing between selection and constraint
  • Cross-species evidence
  • allometric relations (brainbody size in
    vertebrates) imply pleiotropy and constraint
  • but experimental evidence (selection experiments)
    suggests that allometric relations are malleable
  • natural selection may tune allometric relations
    to establish a favorable shape

38
Constraints
  • Time lags
  • Genetic
  • Developmental
  • Historical
  • Trade-offs

39
Historical constraint
  • Shifting balance theory of Sewell Wright
  • Recurrent laryngeal nerve
  • evolved from fish where it passed through gill
    arches
  • during evolution gill arches have moved in
    mammals
  • laryngeal nerve still moves behind its gill
    arch which is now near the heart
  • it goes from the brain, round the aorta and back
    up to the larynx

40
Contingency
  • Chance may lead some groups to solve problems in
    one way, while other groups find different though
    not necessarily worse solutions
  • For example, kangaroos and gazelles have
    different but equally (?) successful modes of
    locomotion

41
Constraints
  • Time lags
  • Genetic
  • Developmental
  • Historical
  • Trade-offs

42
Trade-offs
  • Organs may be adapted for more than one function
  • For example, mouths are used for feeding and
    eating
  • Amphibians must hold their breath while chewing
  • Mammals can chew and breath at the same time due
    to the secondary palate separating nose and mouth

43
Higgledy Piggledy
  • Natural selection is not progressive
  • It does not inevitably lead to an harmonious and
    stable state
  • It does not optimize
  • It merely suffices
  • It is myopic - species can be perfected to
    extinction!
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