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Announcements. Lab 3 handout print from course web page ... Praying mantis. http://www.matings.co.uk/ Mating. Pollination. Spawning. Reproduction = Sex ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Announcements


1
Announcements
  • Lab 3 handout ?print from course web page
  • Midterm test Thursday Feb. 23
  • Readings http//www.mun.ca/biology/dinnes/B2900/R
    eadings.html
  • Lab. 5 Information and Questions on web
    page

2
Biology 2900Principles of Evolution and
Systematics
  • Topics
  • - the fact of evolution
  • - natural selection
  • - population genetics
  • - natural selection and adaptation
  • - speciation, systematics and
  • phylogeny
  • - the history of life

3
Principles of Evolution and Systematics
  • Darwin Natural selection (Galapagos Finches )
  • Population Quantitative genetics (Genes in
    populations)
  • Natural selection Adaptation (Form and
    function

  • Sexual
    selection)
  • Adaptation and Diversity
  • (part I part II)

4
Studies in Evolution
  • Methods of Evolutionary Analysis
  • Adaptation (Form and Function (Ch. 9)
  • Sex and Sexual Selection (Ch. 7, 10)
  • Life-history evolution (Ch. 12)
  • (Kin Selection and Social Behavior,
  • Ch. 11)

?
5
Methods of Evolutionary Analysis
  • Ask interesting questions
  • Answer with
  • Observations from nature
  • Controlled Experiments
  • - laboratory
  • - nature

6
Adaptations
  • Adaptation a trait, or suite of traits, that
    increases the fitness of its possessor
  • Evolutionary Biology demonstrate the evolution
    of adaptation through natural selection

7
Adaptations
  • Adaptive significance of some traits obvious
  • Other traits less obvious
  • (understanding the adaptive significance
  • requires more effort)
  • No adaptive explanation should be accepted
    because it is plausible and charming

8
Alternative Hypothesis (1996)
  • Observation
  • Bulls fight using necks and heads as clubs
  • Alternative hypothesis
  • Neck evolved as a weapon in male-male
    competition for mates (Sexual Selection)

Simmons, R. Scheepers, L. (1996). Winning By A
Neck Sexual Selection In The Evolution Of
Giraffe. The American Naturalist, 148, 772-786.
9
Phenotypic plasticity
  • Phenotype genotype environment
  • Phenotypic plasticity same genotype, different
    phenotype in different environments (Achillea)
  • Can phenotypic plasticity
  • be adaptive ?

10
Phenotypic plasticity
  • How to test same genotype in different
    environments ?
  • Species that reproduce asexually (clone)
  • - plants, invertebrates

11
Daphnia
Parthenogenesis genetically identical offspring
(clone) Experiment raise individuals with the
same genotype in different environments
12
Phenotypic plasticity
  • Phenotypic plasticity in phototactic behaviour
  • positive swims towards light
  • negative swims away from light

light

cylinder
Daphnia
-
13
Methods
  • Genetic variation for phototactic behaviour
  • (among clone variation)
  • Phototactic behaviour in the presence of fish
    chemicals (fish visual predators)

14
Results
Fig. 9.17
Habitat Fish few fish
no fish
Same clone
1. Genetic variation for 2. Phenotypic
plasticity phototactic behaviour 3.
Phenotypic plasticity has evolved
15
Conclusions
  • Phenotypic plasticity can evolve
  • Plasticity can be adaptive
  • - adjusts phenotype to increase fitness
    in a
  • particular environment
  • Genotype x environment interaction
  • Phenotype expressed by a genotype depends
    on the environment

16
Asking Interesting Questions
  • Study Natural History
  • Question conventional wisdom
  • Question underlying assumptions
  • Transfer questions (fields, taxa)
  • Ask Why not ?

17
Studies in Evolution
  • Methods of Evolutionary Analysis
  • Adaptation (Form and Function (Ch. 9)
  • Sex and Sexual Selection (Ch. 7, 10)
  • Life-history evolution (Ch. 12)
  • (Kin Selection and Social Behavior,
  • Ch. 11)

?
?
18
  • Sexual Reproduction
  • Reproduction an important adaptation
  • A diversity of modes of reproduction
  • dioecious
  • monoecious
  • hermaphroditic
  • etc.

19
Sex is Everywhere !
sex 347 x 106
Praying mantis
20
http//www.matings.co.uk/
Mating
Spawning
Pollination
Reproduction Sex
21
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Sexual reproduction is
  • - complicated
  • - costly
  • - dangerous

22
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Searching for a mate
  • - takes time and energy
  • - increases risk of predation
  • Mating increases exposure to STDs
  • Mate may be infertile
  • Why not reproduce asexually ?

23
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Many plant and animal species capable of both
    sexual and asexual reproduction
  • (Aphids, Lizards, fish, Daphnia,
  • plants)
  • Parthenogenesis
  • offspring develop from unfertilized eggs

24
Alternative to Sex
asexual 469,000
  • Asexual reproduction
  • - Parthenogenesis
  • - Apomixis

25
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Sexual and asexual reproduction in same
    population
  • Will one mode replace the other ?
  • Null model (John Maynard Smith)

26
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Assumptions
  • A females reproductive mode does not
  • 1. affect the number of offspring produced
  • 2. affect the probability that her offspring will
    survive

27
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Mode of
  • Reproduction Progeny
  • Parthenogenetic female
    all female
  • Sexual female
    ½ male ½ female

28
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Model
  • Each female produces 4 offspring then dies
  • Asexual female ? 4 females
  • Sexual female ? 2 females and 2 males

29
4/8
16/24
  • Fig. 7.17 Cost of males
  • (Asexual has a 2 X advantage)

30
Each female produces 2 offspring and dies
31
Paradox
  • Sex more costly than asexual
  • Despite costs, sexuality more widespread
  • Asexuality can evolve from sexual species
  • Asexuality is taxonomically and
  • phylogenetically sporadic

32
Conclusion
  • Sex is evolutionarily more successful than
    asexuality.
  • But why ?

33
Maintenance of Sex
  • Short-term advantage of sex?
  • Differences

  • Sexual Asexual
  • Recombination Yes
    No
  • Offspring genetically diverse
    uniform
  • Multi-locus genotypes breaks up
    preserves
  • AaBb Aabb
    AaBb

34
Advantages of Sex
  • Two main theories
  • 1. Sex prevents the accumulation of deleterious
    mutations
  • (or slows)
  • 2. Sex (recombination) produces new genotype
  • combinations favoured in a changing
    environment.

35
1. Do deleterious mutations accumulate?
  • Theory
  • Experimental Evidence

36
Fig. 7.20
  • TheoryMullers Ratchet
  • accumulation of mutations in an asexual
    population genetic load
  • (mutation and drift)

http//www.evolutionary-research.org/Simulators/in
dex.html
37
Fig. 7.21
Salmonella 444 cultures Periodic bottlenecks
genetic drift 1,700 generations 5/444 had lower
growth (fitness) None higher
38
Evidence for the accumulation of deleterious
mutations
E. coli
Others Flies Worms Chromosomes
39
Mutational Meltdown
  • Mullers Ratchet
  • Accumulation of mutations
  • Decreased population size
  • Increased rate of mutation accumulation
  • Feedback ? extinction

40
Sex and recombination halts the ratchet
  • Sexual
    Asexual
  • AABb x AaBB AABb AaBB
  • AABB AABb
    AaBB
  • (a and b deleterious alleles)

41
Advantages of Sex
  • Two main theories
  • 1. Sex prevents the accumulation of deleterious
    mutations
  • (or slows)
  • 2. Sex (recombination) produces new genotype
  • combinations favoured in a changing
    environment.

42
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • (Dunbrack, Coffin Howe 1995)
  • Experiment (30 generations 2 years)
  • Tribolium beetle compared
  • 1. Sexual (evolving)
  • 2. Asexual (nonevolving) 3X advantage
  • Evolve resistance to an insecticide (Malathion)

43
Results
Fig. 7.18
Sexual wins
3 x Asexual wins
44
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Assumptions
  • A females reproductive mode does not
  • 1. affect the number of offspring produced
  • 2. affect the probability that her offspring will
    survive

45
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Interpretation
  • Evolving sexual eliminated non-evolving asexual
    despite the 3 x advantage
  • Assumption 2 incorrect
  • Progeny from sexual females had a higher
    probability of survival
  • Why ?
  • Sexual progeny genetically variable
  • Asexual progeny genetically identical

46
  • The Adaptive Significance of Sex
  • Sex beneficial in a changing environment
  • (genetic variation ? natural selection)
  • Red Queen Hypothesis
  • change in the biotic environment

47
Red Queen
At the top of the hill, the Red Queen begins to
run, faster and faster. Alice runs after the Red
Queen, but is further perplexed to find that
neither one seems to be moving. When they stop
running, they are in exactly the same place.
Alice remarks on this, to which the Red Queen
responds "Now, here, you see, it takes all the
running you can do to keep in the same place".
Evolutionary Theory The biotic environment is
constantly changing due to the evolution of
predators, parasites, disease organisms and
competitors. Need to evolve to avoid extinction.
Result Evolutionary arms
race
48
Red Queen
Host Evolve resistant genotypes Parasite Evolve
to overcome resistant genotypes
49
Example
  • Freshwater Snail
  • - sexual form (males and females)
  • - parthenogenetic form (female)
  • - trematode parasite (infects gonads)

  • ?sterilizes

50
Trematode parasite
Potamopyrgus antipodarum
Gonad
infected
normal
51
Fig. 7.23
Males (sexual)
Sexuals more common in populations with higher
trematode infection rates
52
More Theory
  • Advantages of sex
  • Remove deleterious mutations
  • Genetic diversity in a changing environment
  • But, simulations show the 2 advantages
    individually not sufficient to maintain sex

53
results

54
  • Sex
  • Search for the adaptive significance of sex
    continues
  • A diversity of theories exist for the
    predominance of sexual reproduction
  • Much interest in the adaptive significance
    of variation in sexual reproduction
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