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Modern Human Biology:

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Chapter 16 Modern Human Biology: Patterns of Adaptation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modern Human Biology:


1
Chapter 16
  • Modern Human Biology
  • Patterns of Adaptation

2
Chapter Outline
  • The Adaptive Significance of Human Variation
  • Infectious Disease
  • The Continuing Impact of Infectious Disease
  • New Frontiers in Research Molecular Applications
    in Modern Human Biology

3
Adaptive Significance of Human Variation
  • Human variation is the result of adaptations to
    environmental conditions.
  • Physiological response to the environment
    operates at two levels
  • Long-term evolutionary changes characterize all
    individuals within a population or species.
  • Short-term, temporary physiological response is
    called acclimatization.

4
Homeostasis
  • A condition of stability within a biological
    system, maintained by the interaction of
    physiological mechanisms that compensate for
    changes.
  • Stress is the bodys response to any factor that
    threatens its ability to maintain homeostasis.

5
Acclimatization
  • Physiological responses to changes in the
    environment.
  • Responses may be temporary or permanent,
    depending on the environmental change.
  • Because it is under genetic influence,
    acclimatization is subject to evolutionary
    factors such as natural selection or genetic
    drift.

6
Geographical Distribution of Skin Color in
Indigenous Populations
7
Ultraviolet Light and Skin Cells
8
Skin Color
  • Influenced by three substances
  • Hemoglobin, when it is carrying oxygen, gives a
    reddish tinge to the skin.
  • Carotene, a plant pigment which the body
    synthesizes into vitamin A, provides a yellowish
    cast.
  • Melanin, has the ability to absorb ultraviolet
    radiation preventing damage to DNA.

9
Three Points Skin Color and Evolution
  1. Early hominids lived in the tropics, where solar
    radiation is more intense than in temperate areas
    to the north and south.
  2. Unlike modern city dwellers, early hominids spent
    their days outdoors.
  3. Early hominids didnt wear clothing that would
    have protected them from the sun.

10
Folate and UV Radiation
  • Folate is a B vitamin that isnt stored in the
    body and must be replenished through dietary
    sources.
  • In pregnant women, insufficient levels of folate
    are associated with numerous fetal developmental
    disorders, including neural tube defects such as
    spina bifida.

11
Folate and UV Radiation
  • Studies have shown that UV radiation depletes
    folate serum levels both in laboratory
    experiments and in light-skinned individuals.
  • These findings have implications for pregnant
    women, for children, and for the evolution of
    dark skin in early hominids.

12
Question
  • Which of the following has not been linked with
    light skin color in humans?
  • cloudy skies
  • folate
  • all of these choices
  • clothing

13
Answer c
  • None of the following has been linked with light
    skin color in humans
  • cloudy skies
  • folate
  • clothing

14
Vitamin D Synthesis
15
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.

16
Human Response to Heat
  • Long-term adaptations to heat evolved in our
    ancestors
  • Sweat Glands
  • Vasodilation
  • Bergmann's rule - body size tends to be greater
    in populations that live in cold environments.

17
Bergmanns Rule
  • In mammalian species, body size tends to be
    greater in populations that live in colder
    climates.
  • 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.

18
Allens 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.

19
Examples of Bergmanns andAllens Rules
  • (a) This African woman has the linear proportions
    characteristic of many inhabitants of sub-Saharan
    Africa.
  • (b) By comparison, the Inuit woman is short and
    stocky.

20
Human Response to Cold
  • Short-term responses to cold
  • Metabolic rate and shivering
  • Narrowing of blood vessels to reduce blood flow
    from the skin, vasoconstriction.
  • Increases in metabolic rate to release energy in
    the form of heat.

21
Vasodilation
  • Expansion of blood vessels, permitting increased
    blood flow to the skin.
  • Vasodilation permits warming of the skin and
    facilitates radiation of warmth as a means of
    cooling.
  • Vasodilation is an involuntary response to warm
    temperatures, various drugs, and even emotional
    states (blushing).

22
Vasoconstriction
  • Narrowing of blood vessels to reduce blood flow
    to the skin.
  • Vasoconstriction is an involuntary response to
    cold and reduces heat loss at the skins surface.

23
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)

24
Infectious Disease
  • Caused by invading organisms such as bacteria,
    viruses, or fungi.
  • Throughout evolution, disease has exerted
    selective pressures on human populations.
  • Disease influences the frequency of certain
    alleles that affect the immune response.

25
Impact of Infectious Disease
  • Before the 20th century, infectious disease was
    the number one limiting factor to human
    populations.
  • Since the 1940s, the use of antibiotics has
    reduced mortality resulting from infectious
    disease.

26
Impact of Infectious Disease
  • In the late 1960s, the surgeon general declared
    the war against infectious disease won.
  • Between 1980 and 1992 deaths from infectious
    disease increased by 58.
  • Increases in the prevalence of infectious disease
    may be due to overuse of antibiotics.

27
Question
  • The number one cause of death among humans until
    the 20th Century was
  • AIDS.
  • TB.
  • malaria.
  • infectious diseases.

28
Answer d
  • The number one cause of death among humans until
    the 20th Century was infectious diseases.

29
Vectors
  • Agents that serve to transmit disease from one
    carrier to another.
  • Mosquitoes are vectors for malaria, just as fleas
    are vectors for bubonic plague.

30
Endemic
  • Continuously present in a population.

31
Zoonotic
  • Pertaining to a zoonosis, a disease thats
    transmitted to humans through contact with
    nonhuman animals.

32
Antibodies
  • Proteins that are produced by immune cells and
    serve as major components of the immune system.
  • Antibodies recognize and attach to foreign
    antigens on bacteria, viruses, and other
    pathogens.
  • Pathogens are substances or microorganisms, such
    as bacteria, fungi, or viruses, that cause
    disease.

33
Environmental Factors
  • Global warming may expand the range of tropical
    diseases.
  • The spread of disease is associated with
    encountering people this includes crossing
    borders and penetrating remote areas.
  • The increasingly large human population leads to
    overcrowding, unsanitary conditions and the
    spread of communicable disease.
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