Adaptation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

Adaptation

Description:

Wild radish: flower color (white or yellow = variation) ... Ecotypes of cinquefoil (Potentilla glandulosa) Grown at: Native to: Stanford Mather Timberline ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:34
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: elizabe89
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Adaptation


1
Adaptation
  • The match of an organism to its environment in
    response to past selection
  • Adaptation is NOT acclimatization but an evolved
    response

2
Evolution by natural selection
  • Evolution change in gene frequencies over time,
    due to selection or chance events (i.e. drift)
  • Requires variation, genetic basis, fitness
    differences

3
Evolution An example
  • Stanton, Snow, Handel. 1986. Science 232
    1625-1627
  • Wild radish flower color (white or yellow
    variation) controlled by one genetic locus (
    inheritance)

4
Evolution An examplefitness differences
Replicate
5
Evolution An example
  • Yellow flowers have greater paternity than white
    flowers (variation affects fitness)
  • Change in frequency of color variants in
    offspring generation evolution

6
CKHs ecotypes the classic study of adaptation
  • Clausen (geneticist), Keck (taxonomist), and
    Hiesey (ecophysiologist) worked together in
    California in the 1920s

7
CKHs ecotypes
  • Ecotype the product of a genetic response to a
    habitat
  • Best discerned through transplant experiments
    if trait differences maintained in common garden,
    then they have genetic basis

8
CKHs ecotypes
  • Collected plants along 300 km transect, sea level
    to 3000 m elevation
  • Cloned plants, three common gardens
  • Measured growth, survival, fecundity for 16 years

9
CKHs ecotypes
Height variation in Achillea
10
Transplant gardens
11
Ecotypes of cinquefoil (Potentilla glandulosa)
Stanford Mather Timberline
Native to
Stanford Mather Timberline
Grown at
12
CKHs ecotypes
  • Limiting factor temperature
  • Adaptations frost tolerance, flowering
    phenology (early at high elevation), leaf
    pubescence
  • Adaptations can be morphologically or
    developmentally complex

13
The home team advantage
14
The home team advantage
  • Local adaptation genotypes from on-site perform
    better than those from off-site
  • An important concept for restoration ecology
    Montalvo et al. 1997. Restoration biology a
    population biology perspective. Restoration
    Ecology 5277-290

15
Heavy metal tolerance
  • Limiting factor is not LACK of resource, but TOO
    MUCH
  • Mine tailings contaminated with zinc, copper
    most plants cant survive

16
Heavy metal tolerance
  • Local adaptation in grasses within a meter of
    mine boundary
  • Anthoxanthum odoratum, Agrostis tenuis

17
Heavy metal tolerance
  • Adaptations
  • Physiological tolerance
  • Phenology and type of reproduction (early,
    selfing on mine)

18
Phenotypic plasticity
  • If the same genotype exhibits a different
    phenotype in different environments, that is
    phenotypic plasticity

19
Phenotypic plasticity
  • Impatiens capensis from sun and shade

20
Phenotypic plasticity
21
Phenotypic plasticity
22
Is plasticity adaptive?
  • Fitness consequences of plasticity in Impatiens

23
Main points for adaptation and plasticity
  • Remember adaptation must have a genetic basis
    we dont mean acclimatization
  • Plasticity has a genetic basis and can be
    adaptive, but allows for generalized (not
    ecotypic/specialized) response
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com