Title: BIOGEOGRAPHY AND SPECIATION
1- BIOGEOGRAPHY AND SPECIATION
- Because of geographic barriers and thermal
gradients the ocean can be divided into provinces
- biogeographical regions with characteristic
spp. Assemblages. - Classifications of groups of spp. belonging to a
province usually based on qualitative judgements. - A between-locality similarity index can be
calculated and similar locales can be grouped
into provinces.
2- Jaccards Coefficient
- MijCij/Ni Nj - Cij
- Cij of spp. the 2 samples have in common
- Ni of spp. in sample i
- Nj of spp. in sample j
3- Matrix of coeff. (locality spp.) can be
clustered hierarchically - Based on Mijs can use unweighted-pair group
method - 27-28 N. latitude is transition from Pacific
equatorial water mass and colder California
current - 34-35 at Pt. Conception cool water from north
and warm water from south - Imbrie Kipp, 1961 - Factor analysis to
construct assemblage of Atlantic planktonic
forams - they fit very well with water mass
distribution. - surface-thermal structure of
oceans - same for diatoms
4- Adaptability and Biogeographical Range
- Species living in variable environments should
also have the flexibility to occur over a broad
biogeographical range - Capitella capitata - worldwide
- Mulinia lateralis - New Brunswick - Yucatan
- Jackson, 1974 - Biogeographical range for
shallow-water bivalves is much broader than for
deep-water spp.
5- The significance of biogeographical range lies
in its possible inverse relation to extinction
rate - Species over a wide area might be less prone to
extinction - Bivalve genera with cosmopolitan ranges go
extinct much later - Levinton, 1974 - cosmopolitan bivalves of the
Paleozoic and Mesozoic have much longer
geological time ranges than genera with more
restricted ranges
6- Dispersal and Range Extension
- Biogeographical range can be enhanced through
chance migration across barriers - New colonizations of marine organisms - often
facilitated by humans - provide insight on the
rapidity of spread and effects
73 Types of Colonization of Marine Organisms a)
planktonic larvae may traverse great oceanic
expanses and colonize new coasts b) attached
forms (i.e., barnacles) may raft across oceans
- logs, ships, etc. c) species introduced by
humans for culture
8- Littorina littorea - periwinkle - was noticed in
Nova Scotia in the 19th century - Since that time it has spread southward and
become the dominant gastropod of New England - Probably facilitated by shipping - down to MD,
limited by temp., has probably displaced all
other local spp. of Littorina - propagule - min. of individuals that can
establish a reproducing population
9- If colonization target is small - the absence of
a suitable habitat or the chance of extinction
due to predation or competition by residents will
increase - If immigrants of a species invade a target area
devoid of the species at a constant rate (i), the
expected of individuals, Nt, at time t is - E (Nt) i/(b-d)e(b-d)t-1
- b birth on the target area
- d death on the target area
10- If b is less than or equal to d, population size
is maintained or increased (if bd) only through
immigration. - If we have an exponentially growing pop. with
initial size, a ( of propagules) - the
probability of extinction by some time t is - P0(t) d(eb-dt-1) / be b-dt -da(prop.)
- With b0.7, d0.2, the limiting probability of
extinction with 1 propagule is 0.29 with 2
propagules it is 0.08 with 4 it is only 0.006.
11- The significance of this calculation applies to
the study of gastropods living on both sides of
the Atlantic - many whose pelagic larvae are
found in the open-ocean - Thus, a is probably high (Scheltema, 1971)
12- Island Biogeography
- Schoener 1974 followed the colonization of
marine invertebrates onto plastic mesh sponges.
Large and small were placed near and far from an
algal bed (a presumed source of colonists). The
experiment was performed at Bimini Lagoon,
Bahamas so P (spp. pool) was probably large but
indeterminate. The following results were
obtained
13 1) A stabilization of species number did occur
with time 2) There were more species and
individuals on large than on small sponges 3)
There was no difference in species number on
near or far sponges, probably because the
source area was not the algal bed 4) Early
colonization species were suspension or
detritus feeders and other types followed
14- Origin of New Species
- Speciation - isolation of daughter pop. from
parent pop. - genetic divergence prevents
interbreeding - - isolation of a pop. followed by
allopatric, genetic divergence - Isolation in the sea requires barriers that are
of common occurrence - Open sea is an effective barrier for most shelf
benthic invertebrates
15- North-south provincial boundaries are often
locations of between-water mass isolation
(Mid-ocean Ridges) - Isthmus of Panama
- Although allopatric speciation is an obvious
explanation for speciation on either side of a
geographic barrier, some species ranges end at
thermal discontinuities - Point Conception CA (N-S temp. breaks)
- Cape Hatteras, NC
16- It is possible that genetic divergence can occur
on either side of such a discontinuity - even
with some gene flow thus, spp. might originate
because of strong divergent selection in two
geographically adjacent but environmentally
different habitats. This model of divergence and
speciation is referred to as parapatric
speciation.
17- Species Problems - spp. recognition morphology
etc. - 2 species of eel - Anguilla rostrata (Amer. Eel)
and Anguilla anguilla (European) - species
differences has been a subject of hot debate - Both spp. migrate from freshwater rivers and
brackish water to spawn in open water of Sargasso
Sea - Schmidt (1920s)- evidence suggesting overlapping
but non-identical spawning grounds
18- Large difference in vertebral between the 2
spp. - Because vertebral in fishes is often a
function of ambient temp. during larval stage -
it is possible that each spp. originates as a
single randomly mixed panmictic population in its
spawning grounds - Grounds may have different latitudes and hence
different temperatures
19- Possible that all European eels do not survive
trip to Sargasso, this would suggest that Euro.
eels are the progeny of American eels
reproducing in Sargasso Sea - A difference in chromosome has been found
between the 2 spp. - but only a large allele
frequency difference at one biochemical enzyme
locus was detected in an intensive investigation
of many loci - Furthermore - eels from Iceland have intermediate
vertebral -
20- Mussels
- M. edulis is a species with subpopulations in
boreal and temperate waters of the N. hemisphere
and closely related representatives in S. Amer.
,New Zealand, and Australia. - Southern - M. galloprovincialia - English Channel
and Mediterranean, but M. edulis only in the
English Channel - Barsotti Melluzzi, 1968 - M. gallo. - recent
derivative of M. edulis - since geographic
separation between Atlantic and Mediterranean.
Speciation likely still in progress
21-
- Similar problem with Cardium edule (northern) and
C. glaucum (Med.) these cockles have
overlapping distributions in Britain and Jutland
22- Genetic Variations
- Hardy-Weinberg - ƒ(aa) - p2
- ƒ(ab) - 2pq
- ƒ(bb) - q2
- Heterozygotes might exhibit superior performance
- overdominance - Homozygotes might be preferred - -
underdominance - Genotypes with specific allele might be favored
- - directional selection - Assortive mating - small populations increases
probability of chance deviations -
23- Random sampling of gametes from parents to form
offspring will on average increase with
decreasing population size results in a random
genetic drift of allele frequencies. - Founder Principle States that a small isolate
of a species migrating to a peripheral location
is bound to have a differing genetic constitution
than the parent population. - Such an effect may be important when only a few
larvae survive a trip of ca, 100 km to a site,
originating from a parental population that
produced several million larvae
24- Type of Variation Measurable in Marine Organisms
- Chromosome and polymorphism - some marine
species have variable of chromosomes per
individual among population and variation in
morphological characteristics of a given
chromosomes. - In the drilling gastropod Nucella lapillus,
variation in chrom was observed along the
French coast. Haploid of n13 on wave-exposed
coast, with n18 in sheltered habitats - cause is
unknown. - Ahmed Sparks, 1970 - Mytilus chromosomes
differ in form, but not in .
25- Color polymorphism
- Color spot patterns - products of one of a few
loci - Harpacticoid copepod color spots on
cephalothorax vary in size and shape - Mytius edulis, brown shell phenotype co-occurs
with more common black pheno. Crosses show that a
simple one-locus, two allele genetic model
governs the variation (Innes and Haley, 1977)
Brown allele is dominant over black.
26- Genetic Polymorphism
- The amount of polymorphism maintained in a
species is of great interest because it suggests
the scope of variation on which selection may
act. - Species of Macoma living on different varieties
of sedimentary substrate - examined for degree of
polymorphism at 2 enzyme loci. - No variation found at leucine aminopeptidase
locus - But it was more polymorphic at phosphoglucose
isomerase locus
27- Geographic Variation
- Trends in the distribution of allele frequency
have been commonly observed for marine species,
particularly in protein polymorphisms. Variation
along a geographic distance is known as a cline. - Cline found for shell morphology, chrom , shell
color, and protein allele frequency.
28- Johnson 1971, showed that a 2 allele lactate
dehydrogenase locus in the intertidal crested
blenny Anoplarchus purpurescens showed
latitudinal clinal variation in Puget Sound, WA -
consistent with temperature variation. The A
allele is associated with warm temperature and
increased from less than 0.05 from the Strait of
Georgia southward to over 0.25 near Tacoma, WA
(see graph in notes) - Also for ectoproct bryozoan species - allele
frequency correlated with temperature in Cape Cod
- at 2 loci
29- Lactate dehydrogenase
- Powers et al. (1979) Nature 277 (240-241)
- Adaptive importance of catalytic efficiency
- In the LDH-B allozymes in Fundulus heteroclitus
- North-south cline Atlantic coast
- Temperature effect on enzymes
- Temperature effects on LDH - how it affects
physiology. - Growth rate at low temps, blood oxygen affinity
etc.
30- In M. edulis, 3 common aminopeptidase alleles
- Lap94, Lap96, Lap98
- Catalytic properties of Lap94 different from
96-98, 20 higher efficiency results in higher
accumulation rate of free amino acids - High temp. and salinity, show increase in
aminopeptidase activity (increase in enzyme
protein concentration) well understood for
salinity not temp. - It is where these 2 conditions (temp and
salinity) occur that a cline with higher Lap94
exists
31- Fluctuation of Salinity Conditions
- Higher rates of cellular protein catabolism
(during hyperosmotic acclimation) and excretion
of amines (during hypoosmotic acclimation)
results in depletion of nitrogen reserves.