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Principles of Evolution

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Title: Principles of Evolution


1
Principles of Evolution
  • Chapter 11
  • Life History Strategies
  • James F. Thompson, Ph.D., MT(ASCP)

2
Life History Strategies
  • A Life History Strategy is the adaptive pattern
    and lifelong time course of individual growth and
    development and the mode of reproduction for a
    given species.
  • Maturity ? age of first reproduction (most
    important)
  • Parity ? number of episodes of reproduction
  • Fecundity ? number of offspring produced per
    reproductive episode
  • A Life History Strategy includes aspects the
    anatomy, physiology, and behaviors of the members
    of the species.
  • A Life History Strategy evolves as a part of
    increasing adaptation to a species ecological
    niche.

3
Life History Strategies
  • Variations in these Life History characteristics
    (maturity, parity, fecundity) reflect different
    allocations of an individual's resources (i.e.,
    time, effort, and energy expenditure) to
    competing life functions, especially growth, body
    maintenance, and reproduction.
  • For any given individual, available resources in
    any particular environment are finite.

4
Life History Strategies
  • Time, effort, and energy used for one purpose
    reduce the time effort, and energy available for
    another.
  • The allocation of resources involves trade-offs
    which can be studied ? increase in one activity
    (growth, body maintenance, and reproduction )
    requires a decrease in another.

5
Life History Strategies
  • Natural selection shapes adaptive modifications
    in a Life History Strategy to serve two purposes
  • To increase resources available to individuals
  • To use those resources to the best advantage ? to
    maximize survival and reproduction, i.e., fitness

6
Reproductive Strategies (1)
  • Obligate Asexual reproduction by
  • cell division
  • fragmentation
  • parthenogensis
  • Alternation between Asexual and Sexual
    reproduction within a species, often controlled
    by changes in the environment

7
Reproductive Strategies (2)
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Individuals belong to separate sexes (males and
    females) common in animals rarer in
    (dioecious) plants
  • Individuals have both male and female
    reproductive organs (hermaphrodites) rare in
    animals common in plants (monoecious or perfect
    flowers)

8
Reproductive Strategies (2)
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Individuals may change sex over time (protoandry
    male first protogyny female first)
  • A species may use internal or external
    fertilization

9
Biological Life Cycles
  • Protistans, especially parasites, have complex
    cellular stages in their life cycles
  • In sexually reproducing multicellular organisms,
    the haploid or the diploid phase may be dominant
    (e.g., gametophyte vs sporophyte).
  • In metazoans, developmental complexity varies
  • cell colonies, e.g. sponges
  • zygote ? embryo ? larva or larval stages ? adult
  • zygote ? embryo ? adult

10
Schistosomiasis, A Complex Parasitic Life Cycle
  • In blood vessels of the human gut, adult worms
    (Schistosoma sp.) mate and release eggs that
    reach the interior of the gut and are shed with
    the feces.
  • Larvae hatch in water and enter their second
    host, a snail, in a form known as the mother
    sporocyst.
  • Eventually the larvae within leave the snail and
    enter the water.
  • The larvae pierce the skin of humans walking
    bare-foot in the water, usually tending
    agricultural fields.
  • These larvae mature into adults again becoming
    lodged in the blood vessels of the gut to
    complete the cycle.

11
Reproductive Frequency (1)
  • Semelparity the adults produce all of their
    offspring in a single massive fatal reproductive
    event
  • Semelparous organisms are less common but widely
    distributed among the higher taxa in nature
  • The majority are among the annual flowering
    plants
  • Some flowering plants live many seasons but then
    reproduce and die bamboos, lobelias, and yucca
    plants, etc.
  • A minority of animals certain salmon, trout,
    octopi, spiders, etc.
  • The semelparous lifestyle makes it difficult for
    a herbivore or predator species to specialize on
    the semelparous species whose offspring are found
    in huge numbers but for only a very short time

12
Reproductive Frequency (2)
  • Iteroparity the individual produces offspring
    in several discrete episodes, often in a
    particular season of the year
  • Iteroparous organisms may require several seasons
    or years before they are reproductively mature
  • Iteroparous organisms are common and widely
    distributed in nature
  • The majority are biannual and perennial flowering
    plants as well as most animals
  • Iteroparous species vary in the number of
    clutches they produce in a lifetime and the
    number of offspring per clutch

13
Reproductive Frequency (3)
  • Polycyclic species reproduce intermittently
    throughout their lives.
  • Species whose individual life spans are less than
    a season or a year (microorganisms, algae and
    protistans, many insects and marine
    invertebrates, etc.)
  • Species whose environments are stable (oceans,
    tropical forests) so that resources to support
    the young are generally available (some tropical
    plants, many tropical and aquatic animals,
    humans, etc.)

14
Reproductive Frequency
  • Semelparous, Iteroparous, and Polycyclic species
    may reproduce asexually or sexually, but the
    terms are rarely used in reference to asexually
    reproducing species.
  • Semelparous and Polycyclic species are more
    likely to be found where the environment is
    stable.
  • Iteroparous species have a higher survival
    potential in unstable environments, but may be
    found in the stable environments too.

15
Mating Systems
  • Mating systemThe behaviors and the nature of the
    social organization of a species which determine
    how an organism acquires a mate
  • the number of mates acquired
  • the manner in which they are acquired
  • the nature of the relationship between mates
  • the kind and degree of parental care provided by
    each sex

16
Mating Systems
  • Self-Fertilization Hermaphrodites which do not
    exchange gametes with other individuals in the
    species. Common in plants uncommon in animals.
  • Monogamy, more usually called pair bonding One
    male and one female have an exclusive mating
    relationship.
  • Polygamy One or more males have an exclusive
    relationship with one or more females. Three
    types are recognized
  • Polygyny (the most common polygamous mating
    system in vertebrates so far studied) One male
    has an exclusive relationship with two or more
    females
  • Polyandry One female has an exclusive
    relationship with two or more males
  • Polygynandry Two or more males have an exclusive
    relationship with two or more females the
    numbers of males and females need not be equal,
    and in vertebrate species studied so far, the
    number of males is usually less.
  • Promiscuity Any male within the social group
    mates with any female.
  • These different mating systems form a continuum
    and some species make use of more than one mating
    system, often depending on environmental
    conditions.

17
Embryo Development/Care Systems
  • Egg are discharged into the environment for
    external fertilization with or without parental
    care
  • Ovipary the embryo develops in an egg
    discharged from the females body
  • Ovoviviparity the embryo develops in an egg
    (membrane) and hatches before being discharged
    from the females body (vipers)
  • Vivipary the embryo develops in the female
    reproductive tract before birth (the duration of
    gestation varies among species)
  • Marsupial vivipary
  • Placental vivipary

18
Parental Care
  • Parental Care begins with provision of nutrients
    to the zygote, usually a contribution from the
    female
  • yolk in the ovum, endosperm in seeds, etc.
  • deposition of the fertilized egg in an
    environment where nutrient resources are likely
    to be present
  • providing additional nutrition after birth in
    various animal species by lactation, feeding the
    young, etc.

19
Parental Care
  • Parental Care may also include some provision of
    protection for eggs or young
  • Establishments of territories, construction of
    nests, guarding of nests and young are examples
  • Protective behaviors may not be directly related
    to the degree of nutrient provisioning

20
Parental Care in Plants
  • Parental Care in plants is usually limited to
    resource provision to the zygote in the spore or
    seed
  • Some plants evolve mechanisms, such as producing
    fruit attractive to seed distributing herbivores,
    to increase the likelihood that seeds will be
    deposited widely and with some fertilizer applied

21
Parental Care in Animals
  • Parental Care in animals spans the entire
    spectrum from minimal to elaborate.
  • In general, the greater the degree of parental
    care provided by a species, the lower its
    fecundity ( of offspring/reproductive event)
  • A general trend to greater parental care on the
    part of the female, with much greater variability
    of male parental contributions from none to
    nearly all by the male

22
Parental Care in Animals
  • A general trend to greater parental care in
    proportion to the degree of sociality in a
    species, but single mothers are still capable of
    enormous contributions of care
  • A general trend to greater parental care on the
    continuum of invertebrates to ectothermic
    vertebrates to endothermic vertebrates, but many
    dramatic exceptions exist in each grade
  • A general trend toward greater parental care in
    species with larger brains and whose young
    require more learning to survive

23
Maturity of Offspring at Birthin Animals
  • The extent and kind of parental care provided is
    dependent on the maturity of young when born.
  • This is a continuum not a dichotomy.
  • Precocial offspring exhibit a high level of
    independent activity and self-maintenance from
    birth.
  • Altricial offspring show a marked delay in
    attainment of independent activity and
    self-maintenance.

24
Milestones in Offspring Development
  • Age at which offspring can feed itself (related
    to age of weaning in mammals)
  • Age of attainment of adult body size
  • Age of sexual maturity or puberty
  • Age of first sexual activity or mating
  • Age of first successful reproduction

25
Some Other Life History Parameters of Interest
  • Age at which the offspring leaves the parents
    presence, if this occurs
  • Age specific mortality schedules
  • Age specific fertility
  • Age specific fecundity (litter size)
  • Interbirth interval
  • Age specific adult survival and longevity
  • Type of Social System, if any
  • Population age structure

26
Life History Strategies and Population Growth
  • Life history strategies incorporate
  • Reproductive strategies and mating systems
  • Survival strategies
  • Habitat use
  • Competition with other organisms
  • Life history strategies occur along a continuum
    characterized as r- and K-selection
  • r- and K-selection refer to parameters found in
    population growth models

27
r- and K- Selection
  • Life history strategy is correlated with many
    aspects of an organism's reproductive strategy
    and life cycle, as well as with demographic
    variables such as generation time and life span,
    and population parameters such as population
    density and population dynamics.
  • Where individual species fall on the r-K
    continuum is largely determined by the
    environment in which they live.

28
r- and K- Selection
  • The concepts of r- and K- selection were
    established by Robert H. MacArthur and Edward O.
    Wilson in The Theory of Island Biogeography
    (1967).

29
Robert H. MacArthur (1930-1972)
  • One of Americas major 20th century ecologists.
  • A leader in moving ecology from a descriptive to
    an experimental discipline.
  • Did research on niches and foraging behaviors.
  • Other important books include The Biology of
    Populations (1966) and Geographical Ecology
    (1972).
  • The Robert H. MacArthur Award is awarded for
    meritorious contributions to ecology.

30
Edward O. Wilson (1929- )
  • One of Americas major 20th century evolutionary
    biologists.
  • A specialist in social insects who became a major
    theorist and later a major advocate for
    understanding and protecting biodiversity.
  • Founder of a subdiscipline Sociobiology The
    New Snythesis (1975).
  • Other important books include The Diversity of
    Life (1992), Consilience the Unity of Knowledge
    (1998) and On Human Nature (2004).

31
r- and K- Selection
  • McArthur Wilson developed an elegant system for
    describing the stability and age distribution of
    natural populations known as r/K selection.
  • Now, 'r' and 'K' are symbols in numerous
    equations of theoretical ecology, representing
    components of an organism's life history strategy
    (reproductive capacity and environmental carrying
    capacity, respectively).

32
r- and K- Selection
  • The variables r and k in r-and k-selection come
    from the logistic equation for population growth.
  • The annual growth of a population is calculated
    with the equation I rN (K-N / K), where I
    the annual increase for the population, r the
    annual growth rate, N the population size, and
    K the carrying capacity.

33
r- and K- Selection
34
r- and K- Selection
  • Mathematically, r is the birth rate plus the
    immigration rate, minus the death rate and the
    emigration rate.
  • The K refers to the maximum density at which a
    population is able to exist in a given
    environment, and is called the carrying capacity
    of that environment.

35
r- and K- Selection
  • The r-growth curve is the standard exponential
    growth which leads to population crashes.
  • The functional difference between r and K
    selected growth is shown above left.
  • In reality, K-selected growth fluctuates
    qualitatively.

36
r - Strategist
37
K - Strategist
38
r- and K- Selection
a few large offspring
many small offspring
trade-off between size and number of offspring
39
Ecological Succession
r-selected species
K-selected
species
40
Early Succession Communities
emphasis on rapid reproduction
41
Climax Community
emphasis on survival
42
Life History Strategies
  • The various parameters of Life History Strategies
    (reproductive mode, life cycle, mating system,
    parental care activities, growth and development)
    are useful ways to distinguish species and
    niches.
  • Natural Selection drives the trade-offs in time,
    effort, and energy allocations between survival
    and reproductive function among species.
  • The allocation of resources involves trade-offs
    which can be studied ? increase in one activity
    (growth, body maintenance, and reproduction )
    requires a decrease in another.

43
Life History Strategies
  • The individuals within a species are able to make
    limited shifts in reproductive strategies in
    response to the prevailing environments.
  • Depending on the abundance of resources, probable
    longevity, and co-evolutionary relationships,
    selection pressures on populations can shift
    their reproductive strategy in one direction or
    another to take advantage of available resources
    or to compensate for resource shortages.

44
Life History Strategies
  • It is difficult to find fossil evidence to
    demonstrate the evolution life history strategies
    over geologic time.
  • Instead, scientists document the smaller
    microevolutionary changes in living populations
    which suggest mechanisms which could lead to the
    development of the larger differences in life
    history strategies observed between species and
    higher taxa.

45
Side-Blotched Lizards
  • The Side-blotched Lizard (Uta stansburiana)
    inhabitats rocky, sandy, dry areas with scrub
    vegetation in Western North America
  • It is an r-selected predator of arthropods.
  • Its predators are other lizards, snakes and birds.

46
Side-Blotched Lizards
Predation More
Less
  • There is clinal variation north to south (r- to
    K-).
  • Greater nutrient resources in the south allow
    larger body size and larger clutches, but larger
    lizards may attract more predators.

47
Guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
  • Guppies (Poecilia reticulata) occupy pools
    separated by waterfalls in Venezuela and
    Trinidad.

48
Effect of Predation on Male Guppies
  • In pools where predators, such as the pike
    cichlid (Crenicichla alta), are present, males
    are drab.
  • Where predators are absent, male guppies are
    brightly colored which attracts females more
    successfully.
  • Thus, predation pressures modify mating systems.

49
Male Guppies, Evolution of Color Varieties
  • After several generations, guppies raised in low-
    and high-predation environments evolve different
    features.
  • As measured by the number of bright, conspicuous
    spots, males become more brightly colored (low
    predation) or drab (high predation).

? female male ?
50
Guppies and Predators
  • Guppies in pools with only Pike-Cichlid predators
    were more r-selected (smaller, early maturing,
    larger broods)
  • But when those guppies were transferred to
    natural pools with the smaller Killifish
    predators (Rivulus hartii), natural selection
    drove the guppies to a more K-selected life
    history and anatomy (larger, later maturing,
    smaller broods) in 11 years
  • These modified guppies resembled the K-selected
    guppies found in natural pools with the smaller
    Killifish predators

51
Rock Pipit (Anthus petrosus)
  • The Rock Pipit (Anthus petrosus) inhabits rocky
    coasts in Northern Europe.
  • They are omnivores eating arthropods, molluscs,
    small fish, seeds, etc.
  • They are territorial breeders.
  • Many populations overwinter at their breeding
    grounds, though some migrate to warmer habitats

52
Rock Pipit (Anthus petrosus)
  • A classic time allocation study demonstrated the
    trade-off between territorial defense and
    foraging in a comparison of mild and harsh
    winters
  • Such changes in territorial defense due to
    environment might impact reproduction in the
    following season

53
Common Swifts (Apus apus)
  • The Common Swift (Apus apus) is a migratory
    insectivore
  • Females are determinate egg layers a genetic
    polymorphism
  • Some females always lay two eggs the other
    phenotype lays three eggs
  • Why does the polymorphism persist?

breeding
wintering
54
Common Swifts (Apus apus)
  • Relative fitness varies in different environments
  • In mild years, mothers with clutch size 3 have
    more offspring survive to fledge, but
  • In harsh years, mothers with clutch size 2 have
    more offspring survive to fledge
  • So natural selection preserves both genotypes in
    the population over time

55
Seed Predatore Selection Pressure on Bean Plants
The Leguminosae are a family of bean plants the
screwbean mesquite is illustrated on the left.
The Bruchinae are a subfamily of weevils
(beetles) which lay their eggs in seeds where
their larva mature and pupate, destroying the
seed in the process.
  • Life history strategies evolve under different
    environmental demands.
  • This can be diagrammatically represented with
    alternative energy budget allocations.
  • Some plants can alter their reproductive
    strategies depending on the impact of herbivores
    on their energy budgets

56
Energy Budgets, Beans Free of and Under Beetle
Attack
defend against herbivory
  • The size of the arrow represents the size of the
    energy investment.
  • Free of beetle attack, beans allocate more to
    Toxins and Growth than to Reproduction.
  • Under beetle attack, beans evolved a strategy of
    increased Reproduction, overwhelming beetles with
    a large output of seeds, but at the expense of
    Toxin production and vegetative Growth.

57
Phenotypic Plasticity
  • The term phenotypic plasticity refers to the
    variation in phenotype (for a given genotype)
    which occurs due to the influence of
    environmental factors.
  • Phenotypic plasticity can represent the small and
    sometimes trivial differences which we observe
    in identical twins.

58
Phenotypic Plasticity
  • Phenotypic plasticity more often represents the
    sorts of regular changes observed when
    individuals of the same genotype develop or
    behave differently when they live in different
    environments.

59
Phenotypic Plasticity
  • Phenotypic plasticity may be a negative
    consequence of an inadequate environment.
  • organisms do not grow to their full size
    potential if denied adequate nutrients or water
  • young song birds of some species may be unable to
    sing the correct songs if denied exposure to
    adults singing the songs at a critical period in
    development.

60
Phenotypic Plasticity
  • Phenotypic plasticity can evolve!
  • Like any other potentially adaptive trait,
    phenotypic plasticity must be examined
    scientifically and its adaptive value, conferring
    increased reproductive fitness on the organisms,
    must be demonstrated.

61
Phenotypic Plasticity in Daphnia
  • Daphnia magna, the water flea, is a fresh water
    crustacean which is a popular invertebrate for
    laboratory studies in evolutionary biology and
    ecology.
  • Because Daphnia normally reproduce asexually,
    they are a good experimental animal for studies
    of phenotypic plasticity
  • Genetically identical clones can quickly and
    easily be produced and exposed to different
    environments in a controlled laboratory setting.

62
A Water Flea Daphnia sp.
63
Phenotypic Plasticity in Daphnia
  • Phenotypic plasticity is observed in Daphnia sp.
    in response to predators.
  • Individual water fleas have the potential to grow
    a helmet and longer spine when exposed to
    chemicals from various of their natural predators
    (fish).

? helmet
64
Phenotypic Plasticity in Daphnia
  • The genetic potential was already present in the
    Daphnia genome, but it requires the action of the
    predator chemical dues to activate the genes for
    the altered morphology.
  • Interestingly, the asexual daughters of water
    fleas who have grown the helmet during their
    lifetime may be able to start life by growing a
    helmet, and therefore, the helmet may be
    larger than the helmets offspring of nonhelmeted
    females living in the same environment.

65
Conclusions
  • It is sometimes assumed that in most species,
    life history strategies are largely uniform and
    predetermined, produced by the usual genetic and
    developmental mechanisms.
  • Those mechanisms have been developed by natural
    selection.
  • However, there is evidence for variation in the
    components of a life history strategy even within
    a given species and that variation can be
    modified by natural selection.

66
Conclusions
  • Observed variation in life history strategy
    within a given species suggests that natural
    selection acted in the past to produce the great
    diversity of life history strategies we observe
    within the living world.
  • To put it another way We can assume all
    ecological relationships co-evolved, often in an
    incremental fashion, with the species in a
    community impacting each other in various ways.

67
Conclusions
  • Most evolutionary changes are compromises and
    trade-offs and subject to various constraints.
  • To increase the success of one structure or
    function, there is often a compensatory loss in
    performance of some other structure or function.

68
End Chapter 11
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